Kawakami Tamihiro, Kaminishi Kyoko, Soma Yoshinao, Kushimoto Tsuneto, Mizoguchi Masako
Department of Dermatology, St. Marianna University School of Medicine, Miyamae-ku, Kanagawa 216-8511, Japan.
J Dermatol Sci. 2006 Aug;43(2):127-34. doi: 10.1016/j.jdermsci.2006.04.002. Epub 2006 Jul 14.
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is an allergic skin disease that follows a clinical course of 'flare-up' and remission. Histamine and tryptase are inducers of pruritus and non-sedating second-generation antihistamines, including fexofenadine, are widely used for treatment of allergic skin disorders.
We assessed the efficacy of a second-generation antihistamine in AD patients and examined its pharmacological effects on chemical mediators.
The scoring atopic dermatitis (SCORAD) instrument and visual analogue scale (VAS) for pruritus were used to assess disease severity in 349 AD patients. Twenty patients with moderate AD symptoms, who had not received any treatment for 2 weeks, were randomly assigned into two groups. Ten patients underwent fexofenadine and emollient treatment (Group 1) and 10 received fexofenadine and steroid treatment (Group 2) for 1 week. SCORAD and VAS for pruritus, and blood histamine and tryptase levels were evaluated before and after treatment.
SCORAD and VAS improved in both Group 1 (p=0.01 and p=0.006, respectively) and Group 2 (p<0.001 and p=0.001, respectively). The improvement in Group 1 showed a significant correlation with the diminution rate of blood tryptase levels (SCORAD: r=0.83 and p=0.013, respectively; VAS: r=0.81, p=0.015, respectively). End-point plasma tryptase levels were significantly lower than baseline levels in Group 2 (p=0.046). Histamine levels did not show any significant changes in either group.
These results suggest that second-generation antihistamine therapy reduces AD pruritus, resulting in the effective clinical treatment for AD. In addition, monitoring tryptase levels during antihistamine therapy in moderate AD treatment may prove to be useful in establishing treatment effects.
特应性皮炎(AD)是一种具有“发作”和缓解临床病程的过敏性皮肤病。组胺和类胰蛋白酶是瘙痒的诱导剂,包括非索非那定在内的非镇静第二代抗组胺药被广泛用于治疗过敏性皮肤病。
我们评估了第二代抗组胺药对AD患者的疗效,并研究了其对化学介质的药理作用。
采用特应性皮炎评分(SCORAD)工具和瘙痒视觉模拟量表(VAS)评估349例AD患者的疾病严重程度。20例中度AD症状患者,在2周内未接受任何治疗,被随机分为两组。10例患者接受非索非那定和润肤剂治疗(第1组),10例接受非索非那定和类固醇治疗(第2组),为期1周。在治疗前后评估SCORAD和瘙痒VAS,以及血液组胺和类胰蛋白酶水平。
第1组(分别为p = 0.01和p = 0.006)和第2组(分别为p < 0.001和p = 0.001)的SCORAD和VAS均有所改善。第1组的改善与血液类胰蛋白酶水平的降低率显著相关(SCORAD:分别为r = 0.83和p = 0.013;VAS:r = 0.81,p = 0.015)。第2组的终点血浆类胰蛋白酶水平显著低于基线水平(p = 0.046)。两组组胺水平均未显示任何显著变化。
这些结果表明,第二代抗组胺药治疗可减轻AD瘙痒,从而有效临床治疗AD。此外,在中度AD治疗中抗组胺药治疗期间监测类胰蛋白酶水平可能有助于确定治疗效果。