Crawford F, Hollis S
University of Dundee, Tayside Centre for General Practice, MacKenzie Building, Kirsty Semple Way, Edinburgh, UK, EH3 8DE.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007 Jul 18;2007(3):CD001434. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001434.pub2.
Fungal infections of the feet normally occur in the outermost layer of the skin (epidermis). The skin between the toes is a frequent site of infection which can cause pain and itchiness. Fungal infections of the nail (onychomycosis) can affect the entire nail plate.
To assess the effects of topical treatments in successfully treating (rate of treatment failure) fungal infections of the skin of the feet and toenails and in preventing recurrence.
We searched the Cochrane Skin Group Specialised Register (January 2005), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library Issue 1, 2005), MEDLINE and EMBASE (from inception to January 2005). We screened the Science Citation Index, BIOSIS, CAB - Health and Healthstar, CINAHL DARE, NHS Economic Evaluation Database and EconLit (March 2005). Bibliographies were searched.
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) using participants who had mycologically diagnosed fungal infections of the skin and nails of the foot.
Two authors independently summarised the included trials and appraised their quality of reporting using a structured data extraction tool.
Of the 144 identified papers, 67 trials met the inclusion criteria. Placebo-controlled trials yielded the following pooled risk ratios (RR) of treatment failure for skin infections: allylamines RR 0.33 (95% CI 0.24 to 0.44); azoles RR 0.30 (95% CI 0.20 to 0.45); ciclopiroxolamine RR 0.27 (95% CI 0.11 to 0.66); tolnaftate RR 0.19 (95% CI 0.08 to 0.44); butenafine RR 0.33 (95% CI 0.24 to 0.45); undecanoates RR 0.29 (95% CI 0.12 - 0.70). Meta-analysis of 11 trials comparing allylamines and azoles showed a risk ratio of treatment failure RR 0.63 (95% CI 0.42 to 0.94) in favour of allylamines. Evidence for the management of topical treatments for infections of the toenails is sparser. There is some evidence that ciclopiroxolamine and butenafine are both effective but they both need to be applied daily for prolonged periods (at least 1 year). The 6 trials of nail infections provided evidence that topical ciclopiroxolamine has poor cure rates and that amorolfine might be substantially more effective but more research is required.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Placebo-controlled trials of allylamines and azoles for athlete's foot consistently produce much higher percentages of cure than placebo. Allylamines cure slightly more infections than azoles and are now available OTC. Further research into the effectiveness of antifungal agents for nail infections is required.
足部真菌感染通常发生在皮肤的最外层(表皮)。脚趾间的皮肤是常见的感染部位,可引起疼痛和瘙痒。指甲真菌感染(甲癣)可累及整个甲板。
评估局部治疗成功治疗足部皮肤和趾甲真菌感染(治疗失败率)及预防复发的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane皮肤组专业注册库(2005年1月)、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(《Cochrane图书馆》2005年第1期)、MEDLINE和EMBASE(从创刊至2005年1月)。我们筛选了科学引文索引、BIOSIS、CAB - Health和Healthstar、CINAHL DARE、NHS经济评估数据库和EconLit(2005年3月)。检索了参考文献。
使用经真菌学诊断为足部皮肤和指甲真菌感染的参与者的随机对照试验(RCT)。
两位作者独立总结纳入的试验,并使用结构化数据提取工具评估其报告质量。
在144篇已识别的论文中,67项试验符合纳入标准。安慰剂对照试验得出皮肤感染治疗失败的合并风险比(RR)如下:烯丙胺类RR 0.33(95%CI 0.24至0.44);唑类RR 0.30(95%CI 0.20至0.45);环吡酮胺RR 0.27(95%CI 0.11至0.66);托萘酯RR 0.19(95%CI 0.08至0.44);布替萘芬RR 0.33(95%CI 0.24至0.45);十一烯酸盐RR 0.29(95%CI 0.12 - 0.70)。对11项比较烯丙胺类和唑类的试验进行的荟萃分析显示,治疗失败的风险比RR为0.63(95%CI 0.42至0.94),支持烯丙胺类。关于趾甲感染局部治疗管理的证据较少。有一些证据表明环吡酮胺和布替萘芬均有效,但两者都需要长期每日应用(至少1年)。6项指甲感染试验提供的证据表明,局部使用环吡酮胺治愈率较低,阿莫罗芬可能效果显著更好,但还需要更多研究。
安慰剂对照试验表明,烯丙胺类和唑类治疗足癣的治愈率始终远高于安慰剂。烯丙胺类治愈的感染比唑类略多,现在可作为非处方药使用。需要进一步研究抗真菌药物治疗指甲感染的有效性。