Steroid Phobia in Patients With Vulvar Lichen Sclerosus.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Emily Delpero, Abi Sriharan, Amanda Selk
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: Steroid phobia in people with dermatologic conditions is associated with noncompliance with topical corticosteroids (TCS). Although it has not been studied in those with vulvar lichen sclerosus (vLS), first-line therapy is lifelong maintenance TCS, and noncompliance is associated with impaired quality of life, progression of architecture changes, and vulvar skin cancer. The authors aimed to measure steroid phobia in patients with vLS and determine their most valued sources of information to direct future interventions to address this phenomenon.

Methods: The authors adapted a preexisting, validated scale for steroid phobia (TOPICOP), which is a 12-item questionnaire that produces a score of 0 = no phobia and 100 = maximum phobia. The anonymous survey was distributed across social media platforms with an in-person component at the authors' institution. Eligible participants included those with clinical or biopsy-proven LS. Participants were excluded if they did not consent or did not communicate in English.

Results: The authors obtained 865 online responses over a 1-week period. The in-person pilot obtained 31 responses, with a response rate of 79.5%. Mean global steroid phobia score was 43.02 (21.9)% and in-person responses were not significantly different (40.94 [16.03]%, p = .59). Approximately 40% endorsed waiting as long as they can before using TCS and stop as soon as possible. The most influential sources to improve patient comfort with TCS were physician and pharmacist reassurance over online resources.

Conclusions: Steroid phobia is common in patients with vLS. Focused efforts to address steroid phobia among health care providers is the next best step toward improving patient comfort with TCS.

外阴硬化性地衣患者的类固醇恐惧症。
目的:皮肤疾病患者的类固醇恐惧症与局部皮质类固醇(TCS)的不依从性有关。尽管尚未对外阴硬化苔藓(vLS)患者进行研究,但一线治疗是终身维持性TCS,不依从性与生活质量受损、结构改变进展和外阴皮肤癌有关。作者旨在测量vLS患者的类固醇恐惧症,并确定他们最有价值的信息来源,以指导未来的干预措施,以解决这一现象。方法:作者采用了一种预先存在的、经过验证的类固醇恐惧症量表(TOPICOP),这是一份12项的问卷,得分为0 =无恐惧症,100 =最大恐惧症。这项匿名调查在社交媒体平台上分发,其中包括在作者所在机构进行的面对面调查。符合条件的参与者包括临床或活检证实的LS患者。如果参与者不同意或不会用英语交流,则被排除在外。结果:作者在1周的时间内获得了865份在线回复。现场试点获得31份回复,回复率为79.5%。总体平均类固醇恐惧评分为43.02(21.9)%,面对面反应为40.94 [16.03]%,p = 0.59)。大约40%的人赞成在使用TCS之前尽可能等待更长时间并尽快停止。对改善TCS患者舒适度最有影响的来源是医生和药剂师对在线资源的保证。结论:类固醇恐惧症在vLS患者中很常见。在医疗保健提供者中集中努力解决类固醇恐惧症是改善患者对TCS的舒适度的下一个最好的步骤。
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来源期刊
Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease
Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
8.10%
发文量
158
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease is the source for the latest science about benign and malignant conditions of the cervix, vagina, vulva, and anus. The Journal publishes peer-reviewed original research original research that addresses prevalence, causes, mechanisms, diagnosis, course, treatment, and prevention of lower genital tract disease. We publish clinical guidelines, position papers, cost-effectiveness analyses, narrative reviews, and systematic reviews, including meta-analyses. We also publish papers about research and reporting methods, opinions about controversial medical issues. Of particular note, we encourage material in any of the above mentioned categories that is related to improving patient care, avoiding medical errors, and comparative effectiveness research. We encourage publication of evidence-based guidelines, diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms, and decision aids. Original research and reviews may be sub-classified according to topic: cervix and HPV, vulva and vagina, perianal and anal, basic science, and education and learning. The scope and readership of the journal extend to several disciplines: gynecology, internal medicine, family practice, dermatology, physical therapy, pathology, sociology, psychology, anthropology, sex therapy, and pharmacology. The Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease highlights needs for future research, and enhances health care. The Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease is the official journal of the American Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology, the International Society for the Study of Vulvovaginal Disease, and the International Federation of Cervical Pathology and Colposcopy, and sponsored by the Australian Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology and the Society of Canadian Colposcopists.
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