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Wound Healing

'Transcutaneous Systemic' Clobetasol Reverses Bullous Pemphigoid

Transcutaneous systemic clobetasol therapy may be more effective than oral prednisone.

By: BRUCE JANCIN, Skin & Allergy News Digital Network

01/02/12

FROM THE ANNUAL CONGRESS OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY AND VENEREOLOGY

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Vitals

Major Finding: Disease control was achieved in a mean of 26 days in 90% of patients with mild disease and in 73.5% with severe disease.

Data Source: A series of 74 bullous pemphigoid patients.

Disclosures: Dr. Jonkman reported no relevant financial disclosures.

LISBON – An intensive regimen of whole-body topical clobetasol may be an effective and better tolerated alternative to standard, high-dose oral prednisone in patients with milder cases of bullous pemphigoid, according to Dr. Marcel F. Jonkman.

"In your daily practice you all use topical clobetasol, but not like this. I call it transcutaneous systemic clobetasol therapy. That means you put it on the entire geography, the whole body surface from your cheeks to your toes, not just on lesional skin," Dr. Jonkman explained at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.

    


Photos courtesy Dr. Marcel F. Jonkman

 

A patient with bullous pemphigoid is shown before undergoing treatment (top).

 

This is a laborious 4-month-long course of therapy. For mild disease – which Dr. Jonkman defined as fewer than 10 new bullae arising during the 3 days before first consultation – patients apply 20 g of clobetasol propionate cream once daily for the first month, then every other day for the second month, twice weekly in the third, and once per week for the fourth month.

Patients with severe bullous pemphigoid follow the same schedule, using 30 g per application rather than 20 g.

    



The same patient is shown after undergoing 1 week of full-body clobetasol treatment.

 

"That's really a lot of clobetasol. If you put on 25 g, I expect it's effectively equivalent to 35-40 mg of oral prednisone. Sometimes I get referred patients who are on 80 mg/day of prednisone and they respond to clobetasol therapy," said Dr. Jonkman, professor and chair of the department of dermatology at the University of Groningen (the Netherlands).

This is a decidedly off-label method of applying the superpotent fluorinated topical corticosteroid, he said. And make no mistake, the medication is absorbed systemically to a substantial degree. That's why it is so effective. Within about 5 days after starting daily therapy, the peripheral hypereosinophilia that marks bullous pemphigoid is reversed, with titers falling into the normal range.

Moreover, whole-body topical clobetasol is capable of inducing adrenal gland suppression and other familiar systemic side effects of high-dose corticosteroid therapy, said Dr. Jonkman. The main advantage of topical therapy is it avoids the severe gastritis that often results from long-term, high-dose oral prednisone.

Clinical Experience

He presented his personal experience using transcutaneous systemic clobetasol in 40 patients with mild, and 34 patients with severe, bullous pemphigoid. Patients in the mild disease group had a mean of 3.6 new blisters during the 3 days prior to first consultation; those in the severe bullous pemphigoid group averaged 36.7.

As a clinical pearl, Dr. Jonkman noted that all patients with severe disease and 39 of the 40 with mild disease had prominent itching. "That means if your patient does not have itch, he or she probably doesn’t have bullous pemphigoid. It's such a central part of the disease," he said.

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