Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Alopecia Areata (AA) is a skin restricted autoimmune disease of the hair follicle, resulting in hair loss of the scalp, and in severe cases of the entire body. AA is the second most common cause of alopecia in childhood; no FDA-approved treatments exist. The use of focused narrow-band ultraviolet-B light via the excimer laser is a common treatment for many skin diseases in patients of all ages. In this study, the feasibility of the 308-nm excimer laser for treatment of patch type AA of the scalp will be examined. We anticipate the excimer laser will be safe and a feasible option for patients with patch type AA. The excimer laser may represent a novel treatment for childhood AA and no comparison or large studies currently exist in the literature.
Hypotheses The 308-nm excimer laser procedure is a feasible, well-tolerated and safe treatment for patch type alopecia areata of the scalp in children.
Full description
The goal of this study is to assess the feasibility, safety and response to treatment of the use of the 308-nm excimer laser in children (age 6-17 years) diagnosed with patch type alopecia areata involving the scalp, present for more than 6 months duration. Patients meeting the inclusion criteria will be randomly enrolled in a treatment group or placebo group. Response to treatment during and after the 12-week laser treatment course will be measured in terms of hair regrowth utilizing the SALT score and 2 blinded evaluations of subject photographs.
Specific Aims Evaluate the feasibility and safety of twice-weekly excimer laser treatments over a period of 12 weeks. Measures will include side effects, response to treatment (hair growth), tolerability of therapy, attrition, attendance, and overall satisfaction with this treatment modality.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Children who have been diagnosed with an autoimmune skin disease or photosensitivity disorder.
Children who have been using topical steroids to the scalp, have other scalp disease or are using injected or oral steroids, biologic agents or chemotherapy for other medical conditions.
Children under current treatment for other skin conditions with oral medications (such as an oral corticosteroid) and/or topical treatments such as topical corticosteroids that may affect hair regrowth. Specifically, for topical medications, any child that requires the use of class 1-2 topical corticosteroids will be excluded.
Any subject who is currently experiencing significant spontaneous regrowth of terminal hair.
Patients with alopecia universalis, totalis, ophiasis pattern or diffuse AA may not participate in this feasibility study.
Parent/guardian who do not consent or children who do not assent to participate.
Any subject who has had AA for less than 6 months and is not willing to undergo a 6 week wash-out period prior to start of the study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal