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在湿疹患儿的标准湿疹管理中添加保湿浴添加剂:BATHE RCT。

Adding emollient bath additives to standard eczema management for children with eczema: the BATHE RCT.

机构信息

Primary Care and Population Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.

Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.

出版信息

Health Technol Assess. 2018 Oct;22(57):1-116. doi: 10.3310/hta22570.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Childhood eczema is very common. Treatment often includes emollient bath additives, despite there being little evidence of their effectiveness.

OBJECTIVES

To determine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of emollient bath additives in the management of childhood eczema.

DESIGN

Pragmatic, randomised, open-label, multicentre superiority trial with two parallel groups.

SETTING

Ninety-six general practices in Wales, the west of England and southern England. Invitation by personal letter or opportunistically.

PARTICIPANTS

Children aged between 12 months and 12 years fulfilling the UK Diagnostic Criteria for Atopic Eczema. Children with inactive or very mild eczema (a score of ≤ 5 on the Nottingham Eczema Severity Scale) were excluded, as were children who bathed less than once per week or whose parents/carers were not prepared to accept randomisation.

INTERVENTIONS

The intervention group were prescribed bath additives by their usual clinical team and were asked to use them regularly for 12 months. The control group were asked to use no bath additives for 12 months. Both groups continued standard eczema management, including regular leave-on emollients and topical corticosteroids (TCSs) when required.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

The primary outcome was eczema control measured by Patient Oriented Eczema Measure [POEM, 0 (clear) to 28 (severe)] weekly for 16 weeks. The secondary outcomes were eczema severity over 1 year (4-weekly POEM), number of eczema exacerbations, disease-specific quality of life (QoL) (Dermatitis Family Impact Questionnaire), generic QoL (Child Health Utility-9 Dimensions) and type and quantity of topical steroid/calcineurin inhibitors prescribed. Children were randomised (1 : 1) using online software to either bath additives plus standard eczema care or standard eczema care alone, stratified by recruiting centre, and there was open-label blinding.

RESULTS

From December 2014 to May 2016, 482 children were randomised: 51% were female, 84% were white and the mean age was 5 years ( = 264 in the intervention group,  = 218 in the control group). Reported adherence to randomised treatment allocation was > 92% in both groups, with 76.7% of participants completing at least 12 (80%) of the first 16 weekly questionnaires for the primary outcome. Baseline POEM score was 9.5 [standard deviation (SD) 5.7] in the bath additives group and 10.1 (SD 5.8) in the no bath additives group. Average POEM score over the first 16 weeks was 7.5 (SD 6.0) in the bath additives group and 8.4 (SD 6.0) in the no bath additives group, with no statistically significant difference between the groups. After controlling for baseline severity and confounders (ethnicity, TCS use, soap substitute use) and allowing for clustering of participants within centres and responses within participants over time, POEM scores in the no bath additive group were 0.41 points higher than in the bath additive group (95% confidence interval -0.27 to 1.10), which is well below the published minimal clinically important difference of 3 points. There was no difference between groups in secondary outcomes or in adverse effects such as redness, stinging or slipping.

LIMITATIONS

Simple randomisation resulted in an imbalance in baseline group size, although baseline characteristics were well balanced between groups.

CONCLUSION

This trial found no evidence of clinical benefit of including emollient bath additives in the standard management of childhood eczema.

FUTURE WORK

Further research is required on optimal regimens of leave-on emollients and the use of emollients as soap substitutes.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN84102309.

FUNDING

This project was funded by the NIHR Health Technology Assessment Programme and will be published in full in ; Vol. 22, No. 57. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

摘要

背景

儿童湿疹非常常见。尽管医学证据表明其疗效甚微,但治疗方法仍常包括使用保湿浴添加剂。

目的

确定在儿童湿疹管理中使用保湿浴添加剂的临床效果和成本效益。

设计

具有两个平行组的实用、随机、开放标签、多中心优势试验。

设置

威尔士、英格兰西部和英格兰南部的 96 家普通诊所。通过个人信件或机会邀请参与。

参与者

符合特应性皮炎英国诊断标准的 12 个月至 12 岁儿童。排除活动期或非常轻度湿疹(诺丁汉湿疹严重程度量表评分为≤5)的儿童,以及每周洗澡次数少于一次或其父母/照顾者不准备接受随机分组的儿童。

干预措施

干预组由其常规临床团队开出处方浴添加剂,并要求他们在 12 个月内定期使用。对照组要求在 12 个月内不使用任何浴添加剂。两组均继续进行标准的湿疹管理,包括定期使用外用保湿剂和必要时使用局部皮质类固醇(TCS)。

主要观察指标

主要结局是通过患者为中心的湿疹测量(POEM,0[清晰]至 28[严重])每周测量 16 周评估湿疹控制情况。次要结局是 1 年内湿疹严重程度(4 周 POEM)、湿疹发作次数、疾病特异性生活质量(湿疹家庭影响问卷)、一般生活质量(儿童健康效用-9 维度)以及开具的局部皮质类固醇/钙调神经磷酸酶抑制剂的类型和数量。儿童采用在线软件以 1:1 的比例随机分配至浴添加剂加标准湿疹护理或标准湿疹护理组,按招募中心分层,并且采用开放标签盲法。

结果

2014 年 12 月至 2016 年 5 月,共纳入 482 名儿童:51%为女性,84%为白人,平均年龄为 5 岁(干预组 264 名,对照组 218 名)。两组报告的随机治疗分配依从性均>92%,76.7%的参与者至少完成了 12 次(80%)主要结局的前 16 周每周问卷调查。浴添加剂组基线 POEM 评分为 9.5(标准差[SD] 5.7),无浴添加剂组为 10.1(SD 5.8)。浴添加剂组在第 16 周时的平均 POEM 评分为 7.5(SD 6.0),无浴添加剂组为 8.4(SD 6.0),两组间无统计学差异。在控制基线严重程度和混杂因素(种族、TCS 使用、肥皂替代品使用)并允许参与者在中心内和随时间在参与者内进行聚类后,无浴添加剂组的 POEM 评分比浴添加剂组高 0.41 分(95%置信区间-0.27 至 1.10),远低于发表的 3 分的最小临床重要差异。两组在次要结局或不良反应(发红、刺痛或滑脱)方面无差异。

局限性

简单随机化导致基线组大小不平衡,尽管两组基线特征均衡。

结论

本试验未发现在儿童湿疹标准管理中加入保湿浴添加剂有临床获益的证据。

未来工作

需要进一步研究外用保湿剂的最佳方案和保湿剂作为肥皂替代品的使用。

试验注册

当前对照试验 ISRCTN84102309。

资金

该项目由英国国家卫生与保健优化研究所卫生技术评估计划资助,将全文在 ;第 22 卷,第 57 期发表。欲了解更多项目信息,请访问英国国家卫生与保健优化研究所期刊库网站。

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