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Effectiveness of Artificial Balneotherapy, Phototherapy and Artificial Balneophototherapy in the Treatment of Psoriasis

U

Universidad Católica del Maule

Status

Completed

Conditions

Psoriasis

Treatments

Procedure: balneotherapy
Radiation: phototherapy
Procedure: balneophototherapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02713711
11/2012 (Other Identifier)
TUCM/1261/N822c/2014

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of artificial balneotherapy (AB), phototherapy (PT) and artificial balneophototherapy (BPT) in the treatment of plaque psoriasis, evaluating the plaque area, alteration of skin pigmentation, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score determination and quality-of-life assessment by Short Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36) and Psoriasis Disability Index (PDI) scores during the month of treatment. Methods: Experimental study, prospective, randomized, single-blind. 14 subjects participated from the city of Talca, Chile medically diagnosed with psoriasis, more than one plaque in the skin without topical treatment voluntarily. All subjects completed the study that consisted of 12 sessions.

Full description

On the selected subjects, it was also performed the evaluation of Minimal Erythema Dose (MED) in order to determine an acceptable dose of UV-B light for the type of skin of each patient. Thus, the evaluations were performed according to psoriasis type, area, color and plaques severity. The formula used for the calculation was:

MED = 2×t(s)×0,75 t: minimum time for erythema occurrence.

Each psoriatic plaque was submitted to three therapeutic sessions per week, during 4 weeks, for a total of 12 sessions.

For the application of AB, the AB group plaques were immersed during 15 minutes in a 35 or 75 l hydrotherapy whirlpool (TB-T45 model and TB-T90 model respectively, Enraf Nonius Company SA, Spain) filled with a solution of warm water (32 °C) and natural sea salt (250 g/L), following the similar protocol of others authors always ensuring that the plaques not receiving this treatment were kept isolated with flexible and insulating adhesive patches (Nexcare® Factory 3M, Chile).

For the implementation of PT, the PT group plaques that would not receive radiation were covered with thick cloth towels, while the healthy skin surrounding the treated plaques were coated with liquid petroleum jelly. Both patients and attendant were protected with special lenses with filter against UV light (Oakley Jupiter, USA). UV-B radiation was applied with the UV Endolamp 474 device (Enraf Nonius Company SA, Spain), 60 cm away from the plaque and in a perpendicular position. In session 1, the MED was calculated for each subject and used as the time of UV-B exposure. On each further session, the exposure time was increased by 25%, until the limit of 5 minutes.

The BPT group plaques received both AB and PT treatments, on the same conditions described above, consecutively.

The C group plaques did not receive any treatment.

Data Collection The plaques were photographed at a distance of 20 cm with a 12 pixel Lumix digital camera (Panasonic, USA). For area quantification, the photographs were taken before session 1 and a day after session 6 and 12, and were analyzed with ImageJ software (version 1.46j; National Institute of Health, MD, USA). For color evaluation, the photographs taken before session 1 and after session 12 were analyzed with the Average color seeker software (Version 0.41; IDimager Systems Inc., Scotts Valley, CA, USA), which uses the Red-Green-Blue (RGB) coordinates system that reports the information about the red color channel, associated to erythema occurrence, in arbitrary units. Therefore, greater red color measurements for skin pigmentation may indicate increased erythema.

The psoriatic plaque severity was assessed before session 1 and one day after session 12 through PASI, which considers erythema, induration and plaque scaling, being 72 points the maximum score.

Quality of life assessment was performed using the SF-36 TM v2 health questionnaire, validated for the Chilean population10, and with the psoriasis disability index (PDI), both performed before session 1 and one day after session 12.

Enrollment

14 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 55 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • be more than 18 years-old,
  • have more than one plaque on the skin,
  • medically diagnosed as plaque psoriasis over a year ago and,
  • without concurrent topical treatment for Psoriasis (by own choice).

Exclusion criteria

  • pregnancy,
  • skin carcinoma,
  • severe diabetes mellitus,
  • uncontrolled chronic pathologies and/or severe cardiac/renal insufficiency and/or acute infections.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

14 participants in 4 patient groups

control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group plaques did not receive any treatment.
phototherapy group
Experimental group
Description:
Twelve sessions of phototherapy (UV-B) applied on psoriatic plaques according to individual initial evaluation of Minimal Erythema Dose (MED).
Treatment:
Radiation: phototherapy
balneotherapy
Experimental group
Description:
Twelve sessions of 15 minutes of balneotherapy (warm water, 32 °C and natural sea salt, 250 g/L) applied on psoriatic plaques.
Treatment:
Procedure: balneotherapy
balneophototherapy
Experimental group
Description:
Twelve sessions of both balneotherapy and phototherapy treatments on the same conditions described above applied on psoriatic plaques.
Treatment:
Procedure: balneophototherapy

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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