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Acupuncture and osteopathic medicine for atopic dermatitis: a three-armed, randomized controlled explorative clinical trial

Authors :
Gabriele Rotter
Moritz W. Ahnert
Anne V. Geue
Katja Icke
Sylvia Binting
Tatjana Tissen-Diabaté
Stephanie Roll
Miriam Ortiz
Thomas Reinhold
Benjamin Kass
Doris Staab
Florian Pfab
Stefan N. Willich
Benno Brinkhaus
Source :
Clinical and Experimental Dermatology. 47:2166-2175
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

Background Patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) frequently use acupuncture (ACU) and osteopathic medicine (OM), although their therapeutic benefits are unclear. Aim To investigate the effectiveness of ACU and OM in patients with AD. Methods In a three-armed, single-centre, randomized controlled open explorative clinical trial, adult patients with AD received ACU, OM or no study intervention (control group; CG) plus routine care. Outcomes included disease severity (SCORing Atopic Dermatitis; SCORAD), itching intensity (visual analogue scale; VAS), frequency of topical corticosteroid (TCS) use over 7 days and cost-effectiveness. Endpoints were analysed by analysis of covariance adjusted for the respective baseline value and TCS use. Results Overall, 121 patients (92 women, 29 men) with a mean ± SD age of 31.4 ± 10.5 years were randomized. After 12 weeks, the adjusted means (95% CI) for ACU, OM and control were, respectively, 22.3 (18.3–26.3), 26.4 (22.6–30.2) and 23.7 (19.9–27.5) for SCORAD (P = 0.32); 27.9 (19.5–36.4), 35.0 (26.9–43.0) and 42.3 (34.7–50.0) for VAS itching (P < 0.05); and 2.3 (0.8–3.9), 1.9 (0.4–3.5) and 4.3 (2.6–6.0), for TCS use (P = 0.10). ACU and OM were not cost-effective compared with the CG. Conclusion Although no differences in disease severity were found, our findings indicate that ACU might reduce itching in patients with AD. Furthermore, ACU and OM showed a trend towards reducing TCS use.

Details

ISSN :
13652230 and 03076938
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical and Experimental Dermatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....82631f8f5d20d0850ba27c9ab0dd216c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ced.15340