4.4 Article

Long-term treatment with low-dose medicine in chronic childhood eczema: a double-trial

Journal

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 43, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/s13052-017-0393-5

Keywords

Eczema; Immunomodulation; Low-dose medicine; SCORAD index

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Funding

  1. Guna S.p.a., Milan, Italy

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Background: The efficacy of low-dose medicine (LDM) in childhood mild/moderate eczema is not known. We conducted a double-blind, two-stage, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial, lasting 23 months, to address this issue. Method: Eighty children with chronic mild/moderate eczema were randomly allocated to Group A (placebo) or Group B (treatment group; Galium-Heel (R), a low-dose multicomponent medicine based upon natural substances; Guna-Interleukin 12 and Guna-Interferon-gamma administered twice a day for six non-consecutive months for each stage). LDM is characterized by the use of biological molecules, such as cytokines, neuropeptides, growth factors, hormones at very low concentrations, which correspond to physiological levels within the human body. The dosage of the cytokines used in this trial (IFN-gamma and IL-12) is 10 fg/ml. The SCORAD index was evaluated by the same operator: subjects with a SCORAD index below 20 were considered to have mild eczema (61/80; mean: 10.79), whereas a SCORAD index between 20-50 indicated moderate eczema (19/80; mean: 26.84). The data of 66/80 children were analyzed in stage 1 and those of 62/66 children in stage 2. The primary outcome measure was reduction of eczema severity assessed by the SCORAD index. Secondary outcomes were disease-free interval, and treatment safety and tolerability. Results: The decrease in disease severity was greater in Group B than in Group A already in stage 1 (a decrease 63. 9% versus 53.2%), but the difference was not significant (p = 0.16). Moreover, subjective symptoms (itching and sleep disturbances) initially decreased and then worsened in Group A, whereas itching decreased linearly and sleep disturbances decreased significantly (p= 0.049) in Group B. Conclusions: Preliminary evidence suggests potential benefit, but further work is needed to validate this approach.

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