Treatment of Hidradenitis Suppurativa Evaluation Study: the THESEUS prospective cohort study.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
John R Ingram, Janine Bates, Rebecca Cannings-John, Fiona Collier, Angela Gibbons, Ceri Harris, Kerenza Hood, Laura Howells, Rachel Howes, Paul Leighton, Muhammad Riaz, Jeremy Rodrigues, Helen Stanton, Kim S Thomas, Emma Thomas-Jones
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Hidradenitis suppurativa is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterised by recurrent inflammatory lesions and skin tunnels in flexural sites such as the axilla. Deroofing of skin tunnels and laser treatment are standard hidradenitis suppurativa interventions in some countries but not yet introduced in the United Kingdom.

Objective: To understand current hidradenitis suppurativa management pathways and what influences treatment choices to inform the design of future randomised controlled trials.

Design: Prospective 12-month observational cohort study, including five treatment options, with nested qualitative interviews and an end-of-study consensus workshop.

Setting: Ten United Kingdom hospitals with recruitment led by dermatology and plastic surgery departments.

Participants: Adults with active hidradenitis suppurativa of any severity not adequately controlled by current treatment.

Interventions: Oral doxycycline 200 mg once daily; oral clindamycin and rifampicin, both 300 mg twice daily for 10 weeks initially; laser treatment targeting the hair follicle (neodymium-doped yttrium aluminium garnet or alexandrite); deroofing; and conventional surgery.

Main outcome measures: Primary outcome was the proportion of participants who are eligible, and hypothetically willing, to use the different treatment options. Secondary outcomes included proportion of participants choosing each of the study interventions, with reasons for their choices; proportion of participants who switched treatments; treatment fidelity; loss to follow-up rates over 12 months; and efficacy outcome estimates to inform outcome measure instrument responsiveness.

Results: Between February 2020 and July 2021, 151 participants were recruited, with two pauses due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Follow-up rates were 89% and 83% after 3 and 6 months, decreasing to 70% and 44% at 9 and 12 months, respectively, because pandemic recruitment delays prevented all participants reaching their final review. Baseline demographics included an average age of 36 years, 81% female, 20% black, Asian or Caribbean, 64% current or ex-smokers and 86% with a raised body mass index. Some 69% had moderate disease, 19% severe disease and 13% mild disease. Regarding the study's primary outcome, laser treatment was the intervention with the highest proportion (69%) of participants who were eligible and hypothetically willing to receive treatment, followed by deroofing (58%), conventional surgery (54%), the combination of oral clindamycin and rifampicin (44%) and doxycycline (37%). Considering participant willingness in isolation, laser was ranked first choice by the greatest proportion (41%) of participants. The cohort study and qualitative study demonstrated that participant willingness to receive treatment was strongly influenced by their clinician. Fidelity to oral doxycycline was only 52% after 3 months due to lack of effectiveness, participant preference and adverse effects. Delays receiving procedural interventions were common, with only 43% and 26% of participants commencing laser therapy and deroofing, respectively, after 3 months. Treatment switching was uncommon and there were no serious adverse events. Daily pain score text messages were initiated in 110 participants. Daily responses reduced over time with greatest concordance during the first 14 days.

Limitations: It was not possible to characterise conventional surgery due to a low number of participants.

Conclusion: The Treatment of Hidradenitis Suppurativa Evaluation Study established deroofing and laser treatment for hidradenitis suppurativa in the United Kingdom and developed a network of 10 sites for subsequent hidradenitis suppurativa randomised controlled trials.

Future work: The consensus workshop prioritised laser treatment and deroofing as interventions for future randomised controlled trials, in some cases combined with drug treatment.

Trial registration: This trial is registered as ISRCTN69985145.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme (NIHR award ref: 12/35/64) and is published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 27, No. 30. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

化脓性扁平湿疹治疗评估研究:THESEUS 前瞻性队列研究。
背景:化脓性扁平苔癣是一种慢性炎症性皮肤病,其特点是在腋窝等屈曲部位反复出现炎性病变和皮肤隧道。在一些国家,皮肤隧道脱毛和激光治疗是标准的化脓性扁桃体炎干预措施,但英国尚未引进:目的:了解目前化脓性扁桃体炎的治疗途径以及影响治疗选择的因素,为未来随机对照试验的设计提供依据:设计:为期12个月的前瞻性观察队列研究,包括五种治疗方案,嵌套定性访谈和研究结束后的共识研讨会:地点:英国十家医院,由皮肤科和整形外科负责招募:干预措施:口服强力霉素 200 毫克:口服多西环素 200 毫克,每天一次;口服克林霉素和利福平,均为 300 毫克,每天两次,最初为期 10 周;针对毛囊的激光治疗(掺钕钇铝石榴石或变石);脱毛;以及传统手术:主要结果是符合条件并假设愿意采用不同治疗方案的参与者比例。次要结果包括:选择每种研究干预措施的参与者比例及其选择原因;转换治疗方法的参与者比例;治疗忠诚度;12个月内的随访损失率;以及疗效结果估计值,以便为结果测量工具的响应性提供信息:2020年2月至2021年7月期间,共招募了151名参与者,其中两次因COVID-19大流行而暂停。3个月和6个月后的随访率分别为89%和83%,9个月和12个月后的随访率分别降至70%和44%,因为大流行导致招募延迟,所有参与者都无法完成最终复查。基线人口统计学特征包括:平均年龄 36 岁,81% 为女性,20% 为黑人、亚裔或加勒比海裔,64% 目前或曾经吸烟,86% 体重指数较高。约 69% 患有中度疾病,19% 患有重度疾病,13% 患有轻度疾病。关于研究的主要结果,激光治疗是符合条件并假定愿意接受治疗的参与者比例最高(69%)的干预措施,其次是脱毛疗法(58%)、传统手术(54%)、口服克林霉素和利福平联合疗法(44%)和强力霉素(37%)。在单独考虑参与者意愿的情况下,激光被最大比例的参与者(41%)列为首选。队列研究和定性研究表明,参与者接受治疗的意愿在很大程度上受其临床医生的影响。由于缺乏有效性、参与者的偏好和不良反应,3 个月后,对口服多西环素的忠诚度仅为 52%。延迟接受程序性干预很常见,分别只有 43% 和 26% 的参与者在 3 个月后开始接受激光治疗和脱毛治疗。更换治疗方法的情况并不常见,也没有发生严重的不良反应。有 110 名参与者开始接收每日疼痛评分短信。随着时间的推移,每日回复率有所下降,最初14天的回复率最为一致:局限性:由于参与人数较少,无法确定传统手术的特点:化脓性扁桃体炎治疗评估研究在英国确立了脱毛和激光治疗化脓性扁桃体炎的方法,并为随后的化脓性扁桃体炎随机对照试验建立了由10个地点组成的网络:未来工作:共识研讨会将激光治疗和脱毛作为未来随机对照试验的优先干预措施,在某些情况下与药物治疗相结合:该试验的注册号为ISRCTN69985145:该奖项由美国国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)健康技术评估项目资助(NIHR奖项编号:12/35/64),全文发表于《健康技术评估》第27卷第30期。如需了解更多奖项信息,请访问 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health technology assessment
Health technology assessment 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) publishes research information on the effectiveness, costs and broader impact of health technologies for those who use, manage and provide care in the NHS.
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