Combined antibiotic, steroid, and moisturizer for atopic dermatitis: A two‐year case series of patient‐reported outcomes

2020 
BACKGROUND Eczema treatments that target Staphylococcus aureus include topical mixtures of antimicrobial agent and corticosteroid diluted in a moisturizer base, previously described in the literature as compounded antibacterial, steroid, and moisturizer (CASM). There have been no placebo-controlled blinded studies of CASM. Thus, patient-reported outcome data may prove valuable. OBJECTIVE To determine the patient-reported clinical course of eczema treatment with CASM. METHODS Longitudinal case series between May 2016 and August 2018 of CASM patients/parents. Patients completed surveys including the POEM measure at start of treatment, 1 week, 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months, and 12 months thereafter. Response curves were fitted to severity measures over time and compared by patient age group; survival analysis was used to estimate time-to-clear status as a function of patient age and initial severity. RESULTS A total of 2153 reports were received from 728 unique respondents with a median patient age of 7 and range of 0-85. Response curves showed significant improvement over time leading to plateaus between 30 and 60 days of treatment. Overall mean improvement between start and day 90 for POEM was 14.3 (from 20.0 [95% CI 11.4-28.8] to 5.7 [95% CI -3.2 to 14.8]). Improvement was seen in each age group. CONCLUSIONS Patient-reported outcomes suggest efficacy of CASM. There were large reductions in POEM scores, mostly in the first 30 days of treatment for all age groups.
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