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Topical anti-inflammatory treatments for eczema: a Cochrane systematic review and network meta-analysis

Lax, Stephanie J.; Van Vogt, Eleanor; Candy, Bridget; Steele, Lloyd; Reynolds, Clare; Stuart, Beth; Parker, Roses; Axon, Emma; Roberts, Amanda; Doyle, Megan; Chu, Derek K.; Futamura, Masaki; Santer, Miriam; Williams, Hywel C.; Cro, Suzie; Drucker, Aaron M.; Boyle, Robert J.

Topical anti-inflammatory treatments for eczema: a Cochrane systematic review and network meta-analysis Thumbnail


Authors

Eleanor Van Vogt

Bridget Candy

Lloyd Steele

Clare Reynolds

Beth Stuart

Roses Parker

Emma Axon

Megan Doyle

Derek K. Chu

Masaki Futamura

Miriam Santer

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HYWEL WILLIAMS HYWEL.WILLIAMS@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Dermato-Epidemiology

Suzie Cro

Aaron M. Drucker

Robert J. Boyle



Abstract

Objective: Eczema is the most burdensome skin condition worldwide and topical anti-inflammatory treatments are commonly used to control symptoms. The relative effectiveness and safety of different topical anti-inflammatory treatments is uncertain. Design: Network meta-analysis performed within a Cochrane systematic review to compare and statistically rank efficacy and safety of topical anti-inflammatory eczema treatments. Data Sources: Cochrane Skin Specialised Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase and trial registries to June 2023. Eligibility Criteria for Selected Trials: Included trials were within-participant or between-participant randomised controlled trials. Participants had eczema that was not clinically infected and was not contact dermatitis, seborrheic eczema or hand eczema. Interventions were topical anti-inflammatory treatments but not complementary treatments, antibiotics alone, wet wraps, phototherapy or systemic treatments. Comparators were no treatment/vehicle or another topical anti-inflammatory. Results: We identified 291 trials (45,846 participants), mainly in high-income countries. Most were industry-funded with median 3 weeks treatment duration. Risk of bias assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2.0 tool was high in 89% of trials, mainly due to risk of selective reporting. Network meta-analysis of binary outcomes ranked potent and/or very potent topical steroids, tacrolimus 0.1% and ruxolitinib 1.5% among the most effective treatments for improving patient-reported symptoms (40 trials, all low confidence) and clinician-reported signs (32 trials, all moderate confidence). For investigator global assessment, the Janus kinas inhibitors ruxolitinib 1.5%, delgocitinib 0.5% or 0.25%, very potent/potent topical steroids and tacrolimus 0.1% were ranked as most effective (140 trials, all moderate confidence). Continuous outcome data were mixed. Local application site reactions were most common with tacrolimus 0.1% (moderate confidence) and crisaborole 2% (high confidence) and least common with topical steroids (moderate confidence). Skin thinning was not increased with short-term use of any topical steroid potency (low confidence) but skin thinning was reported in 6/2044 (0.3%) participants treated with longer-term (6–60 months) topical steroids. Conclusion: Potent topical steroids, Janus kinase inhibitors and tacrolimus 0.1% were consistently ranked as among the most effective topical anti-inflammatory treatments for eczema.

Citation

Lax, S. J., Van Vogt, E., Candy, B., Steele, L., Reynolds, C., Stuart, B., Parker, R., Axon, E., Roberts, A., Doyle, M., Chu, D. K., Futamura, M., Santer, M., Williams, H. C., Cro, S., Drucker, A. M., & Boyle, R. J. (2024). Topical anti-inflammatory treatments for eczema: a Cochrane systematic review and network meta-analysis. Clinical and Experimental Allergy, https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.14556

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 7, 2024
Online Publication Date Sep 2, 2024
Publication Date Sep 2, 2024
Deposit Date Sep 10, 2024
Publicly Available Date Sep 16, 2024
Journal Clinical & Experimental Allergy
Print ISSN 0954-7894
Electronic ISSN 1365-2222
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.14556
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/38375642
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cea.14556

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