Calcitriol shows greater persistence of treatment effect than betamethasone dipropionate in topical psoriasis therapy

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalThe Journal of dermatological treatment
Year 2003
OBJECTIVE: To establish the efficacy and duration of remission post-treatment of calcitriol 3 μg/g ointment in comparison with betamethasone dipropionate 0.05% ointment. METHODs: A randomized, multicentre trial was conducted in 258 adult patients with chronic plaque psoriasis. Calcitriol 3 μg/g ointment or betamethasone dipropionate 0.05% ointment was applied twice daily for 6 weeks or until complete clearance of lesions. Patients whose psoriasis cleared or were significantly improved and did not require treatment continuation at treatment endpoint were contacted over the following 8 weeks to determine whether relapse had occurred. RESULTS: Both treatments were efficacious; improvement in psoriasis or clearance of lesions (residual erythema was allowed) was recorded for 79% and 82% of patients receiving calcitriol or betamethasone dipropionate, respectively. Global improvement and global severity scores at treatment endpoint showed statistically significant differences in favour of betamethasone dipropionate (p<0.05); however, the absolute reduction in mean PASI (psoriasis area and severity index) was comparable between the groups. A statistically significantly (p<0.01) higher proportion of responders remained in remission (no worsening of the disease warranting new treatment) following calcitriol therapy (48%) than betamethasone therapy (25%). This is of potential importance to patients, physicians and healthcare suppliers. CONCLUSION: Twice-daily applications of either calcitriol 3 μg/g ointment or betamethasone dipropionate 0.05% ointment can be used to good effect in the treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis. However, the beneficial effect is likely to persist for longer following calcitriol treatment.
Epistemonikos ID: 9b5ce9d3712d8e57d1c92d4f7932b4f1163041be
First added on: Jun 28, 2012