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Place of Hygiene in Scabies's Treatment in Populations in Precarious Situations (GALEHYGIE)

A

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Scabies

Treatments

Procedure: Global management of scabies

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05271968
APHP210864

Details and patient eligibility

About

Scabies is a parasitic pathology contracted mainly through human contamination. It is caused by a parasite (Sarcoptes Scabiei var. hominis) which lodges into the top layer of the epidermis creating a burrow, which can measure 5 mm to 15 mm, where the female lays her eggs.

After 4-6 weeks the patient develops an allergic reaction to the presence of mite proteins and feces in the scabies burrow, causing intense itch and rash. The usual adult form, called common scabies, is characterized by this nocturnal pruritus, and typical and/or atypical lesions. The typical lesions are the vesicle (translucent vesicle on an erythematous base), the scabious burrow (due to the tunnel dug by the female in the stratum), and the papulo- nodule -nodular scabious (red/brown infiltrated on palpation, predominantly on the male genital areas). They predominate in certain regions: the interdigital region of the hands, the anterior face of the wrists, the external face of the elbows, the axillary region, the areolas, the nipples, the umbilical region, the male external genitalia, the buttock region, the face inner thighs.

Scabies occurs worldwide. However, studies have shown a greater prevalence among populations that do not have access to common hygiene measures: poor, young children and elderly in resource -poor communities, migrant, homeless populations, etc. The "Baudelaire outpatient clinic" (BOPC) at St Antoine hospital in Paris offers general medicine consultations. It has the particularity of offering a so called "Permanent d'Accès Aux Soins" service that allowed any person without health assurance to have access to a general practitioner and treatment, free of charge and help to recover its social rights. Consequently, more than 60% of the patients encountered at the consultation of the BOPC are in a precarious situation.

Usually, poor patients with scabies may be offered a shower and clean clothes at the BOPC Therefore it seemed to us the ideal place to evaluate a treatment's scabies in this population including the hygiene treatment.

Full description

The objective of our study is to evaluate the superiority of a global management of scabies compared to a conventional treatment.

The classic treatment recommended is the prescription of an oral drug, Ivermectin to be taken two times at one or 2 weeks interval. And recommendations on the need to change the clothes and the linen of the bedding the following day after taking the drug, washing them at more than 50° as well as all the clothes three days before are explained. The first course of oral treatment is swallowed at the BOPC, while the second course is given to be swallowed one week later.

For the interventional arm, the first course of the oral treatment has also to be swallowed at the BOPC but the patient will have to come back the following day to take a shower at the BOPC and will receive new clothes. The second course will be given, but the patient will have to come back the following day of the second course to take a shower at the BOPC and to receive again new clothes.

We will compare the number of patients cured in the interventional arm versus the control arm at D28.

Enrollment

218 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patient seen in consultation at the outpatient clinic, diagnosed with non-hyperkeratotic scabies.
  • Living on the streets or without access to body care.
  • Having received information on the protocol and having signed consent

Exclusion Criteria :

  • Patient alcoholic on the day of the consultation
  • Medical history fo psychiatric disease , severe somatic comorbidity, allergy to Ivermectin, pregnant woman
  • Patient not understanding the on-site management (shower, change of clothes, taking the first dose of the drug on site)
  • Non-communicating patient
  • Hyperkeratotic or impetiginized scabies
  • Patients not reachable by phone
  • Patient having been treated for scabies less than 45 days before
  • Patients under guardianship / curator ship or adults and subject to another protective measure.
  • Pregnant and breastfeeding women
  • Persons deprived of liberty by judicial and administrative decision

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

218 participants in 2 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard Care : The classic treatment recommended is the prescription of an oral drug, Ivermectin to be taken two times at one or 2 weeks interval. And recommendations on the need to change the clothes and the linen of the bedding the following day after taking the drug, washing them at more than 50° as well as all the clothes three days before are explained. The first course of oral treatment is swallowed at the BOPC, while the second course is given to be swallowed one week later.
Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Patients in this interventional arm will come back to BOPC the following day after intake the treatment (D1 and D8) to take a shower and to receive again new clothes
Treatment:
Procedure: Global management of scabies

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Bacha Kaoutar

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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