A Real-World, Non-interventional Indian Study Evaluating Intensive Plant-Based Butter Moisturizing Cream in Psoriasis

Dermatology and Therapy - Tập 9 - Trang 537-546 - 2019
Hemangi Rajiv Jerajani1, Jayakar Thomas2, Alka Gupta3, Gurram Narasimha Rao Netha4, Ranju Chawla5, Rashid Shaikh6, Ravindra Babu7, Irene Williams8, Prajakta Talathi9, Suyog C. Mehta10, Rajan Mittal10, Shivani Acharya10, Sujeet N. Charugulla10
1MGM Medical College and Hospital, Mumbai, India
2JT Skin Care Centre, Chennai, India
3Gupta Skin Clinic, New Delhi, India
4Gandhi Medical College and Government Hospital, Hyderabad, India
5Dr. Ranju Chawla’s Skin Clinic, New Delhi, India
6Rehmat Clinic and Nursing Home, Thane, India
7Raga’s Skin Care Clinic, Bengaluru, India
8Dermicos Skin Clinic, Chennai, India
9Skin Space Clinic, Mumbai, India
10Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories Limited, Hyderabad, India

Tóm tắt

Psoriasis is estimated to affect 0.44–2.8% of the Indian population. Moisturizers are a key adjuvant psoriasis treatment strategy, but data regarding their effectiveness, safety and compliance pattern in an Indian context are lacking. Hence, this real-world study on an intensive plant-based butter moisturizing cream (Venusia ® Max) was conducted among Indian patients with psoriasis. This was an observational, patient-reported outcomes (PRO) study in patients with psoriasis aged 18–75 years who were prescribed the cream in routine clinical practice, as per clinician’s discretion, over 4 weeks. The primary outcome measure was improvement from baseline in quality of life assessed using the Dermatology Quality of Life Index (DLQI) at 4 weeks of the study period. The secondary outcome measures were improvement in dryness using the Dry Skin/Ichthyosis Area and Severity Index (DASI) score at 4 weeks, safety and compliance. The DLQI and DASI scores were recorded by the clinicians at baseline and after 2 (optional) and 4 weeks of starting the cream. Safety was assessed throughout the study. The study included 400 patients from 9 outpatient dermatology centers across India. Of 400 patients, 384 completed the study. A significant reduction in both the mean DLQI score (66.7%; p < 0.001) and mean DASI score (84.6%; p < 0.001) was observed at week 4 after starting the cream vs. baseline in the overall population. Overall, the cream showed a good safety and compliance profile during the study period. There were no serious adverse events or deaths. The evidence from the PRO study suggests that use of the intensive plant-based butter moisturizing cream in a real-world scenario has a noticeable impact on improving the quality of life and reducing the skin dryness associated with psoriasis over 4 weeks. The moisturizing cream may serve as a valuable adjuvant treatment option for the management of psoriasis. CTRI/2017/03/008023. Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories Ltd.

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