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Spaced phototherapy sessions during winter as add-on therapy in combination with vitamin D supplementation or not, could be beneficial to improve disease LTC in AD patients
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The major therapeutic challenge in patient with Atopic Dermatitis is long-term control of disease activity (LTC), for which the current TAT-based pro-active strategy does not meet all the needs.
Phototherapy is a good candidate: it is widely used as a second-line treatment in AD with demonstrated efficacy. However, only short-term control has been evaluated; and only 2-3 times a week intensive schedules have been tested and are used in current practice. A novel phototherapy regimen would be required for disease LTC, allowing a trade-off between disease control, UV-induced risks, and patient adherence.
Vitamin D supplementation is another good candidate: several studies have shown lower serum levels of vitamin D to be correlated with more severe AD; and three short-term, low-power low-quality, placebo-controlled randomised trials testing vitamin D supplementation yielded conflicting results, leaving its therapeutic efficacy undecided for short-term control, and unknown for LTC.
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111 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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