Complementary and Integrative Therapies for Childhood Atopic Dermatitis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Results
3.1. Probiotics/Prebiotics for the Treatment of Childhood Atopic Dermatitis
3.2. Vitamins/Minerals for the Treatment of Childhood Atopic Dermatitis
3.3. Chinese Herbs for the Treatment of Childhood Atopic Dermatitis
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Study Type | Treated/Control (N) | Age Range | Probiotic/Prebiotic Treatment and Daily Dosage | Treatment Length | Outcome Measure | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Viljanen et al., 2005 | RCT | 75/67/66 | 1.5–11.9 months | L. rhamnosus GG (LGG) 1010 cfu vs. LGG 1010 cfu, L. rhamnosus (LC705) 1010 cfu, B. breve 4 × 108 cfu, Propionibacterium freudenreichii, Shermanii JS 4 × 109 cfu vs. placebo | 4 weeks | SCORAD at 4 weeks | All groups combined showed improvements in SCORAD: −65%. |
No group differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.27). | |||||||
In IgE sensitized infants; LGG group showed greater reductions in SCORAD (−26.1 points) when compared to placebo (−19.8 points) (p = 0.04). | |||||||
Gruber et al., 2007 | RCT | 54/48 | 3–12 months | LGG > 5 × 109 cfu vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD A, B, and C Subscales at 12 weeks | Probiotic: A (−6.2 points); B (−1.2 points), C (−2.4 points) |
Placebo: A (−7.9 points), B (−1.6 points), C (−2.4 points) | |||||||
No significant group differences in changes in SCORAD subscales: (p = 0.60, 0.27, and 0.52, respectively) | |||||||
Gore et al., 2012 | RCT | 35/36/40 | 3–6 months | L. paracasei 1010 cfu vs. B. lactis 1010 cfu vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | L. paracasei: −51% |
B. lactis: −51% | |||||||
Placebo: −59% | |||||||
No significant differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.7). | |||||||
Torii et al., 2011 | RCT | 26/24 | 4–15 years | L. acidophilus 3 × 1010cfu vs. placebo | 8 weeks | SMS at 8 weeks | Reductions in ADASI score were demonstrated in the probiotic group when compared to placebo (p < 0.05). |
Farid et al., 2011 | RCT | 19/21 | 3 months–6 years | Synbiotic (prebiotic + L. casei, L. rhamnosus, S. thermophilus, B. breve, L. acidophilus, B. infantis, L. bulgaricus), 2 × 1010 cfu total dosage vs. placebo | 8 weeks | SCORAD at 8 weeks | Synbiotic: −39 points |
Placebo: −20 points | |||||||
Significant group differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.005). | |||||||
Gerasimov et al., 2010 | RCT | 43/47 | 12–36 months | L. acidophilus and B. lactis 1010cfu total dosage vs. placebo | 8 weeks | SCORAD at 8 weeks | Probiotic: −14 points |
Placebo: −8 points | |||||||
Significant group differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.001). | |||||||
Significant correlation was seen between decreases in CD4 and CD25, and reductions in SCORAD values (p < 0.05). | |||||||
Yesilova et al., 2012 | RCT | 20/19 | 1–13 years | B. bifidum, L. acidophilus, L. casei, L. salivarius, 4 × 109 cfu total dosage vs. placebo | 8 weeks | SCORAD at 8 weeks | Probiotic: −65% |
Placebo: −46% | |||||||
Inflammatory markers | Significant group differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.002) | ||||||
Significant decreases in IL-6, IFN-γ, and IgE when compared to placebo (p < 0.01). | |||||||
Prakoeswa et al., 2017 | RCT | 12/10 | 0–14 years old | L. plantarum 1010 cfu vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | Probiotic: −37 points |
Placebo: −27 points | |||||||
Significant group differences in changes in SCORAD (p < 0.001). | |||||||
Han et al., 2012 | RCT | 44/39 | 1–13 years | L. plantarum 1010cfu vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | Probiotic: −9.1 pointes |
Placebo: −1.8 points | |||||||
Significant group differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.004). | |||||||
Total eosinophil count was decreased in the probiotic group (p = 0.023) as were IFN-γ (p < 0.001) and IL-4 (p = 0.049). | |||||||
Yang et al., 2014 | RCT | 37/34 | 2–9 years old | L. casei, L. plantarum, L. rhamnosus, and B. lactis 2 × 109 cfu of each strain vs. placebo | 6 weeks | EASI at 6 weeks | Probiotic: −35% |
Placebo: −46% | |||||||
No significant group differences in changes in EASI (p = 0.28) | |||||||
Weston et al., 2005 | RCT | 26/27 | 6–18 months | L. fermentum 2 × 109 cfu vs. placebo | 16 weeks | SCORAD at 16 weeks | Probiotic: −17 points (p = 0.03). |
Placebo: −12 points (p = 0.83) | |||||||
No data given on intergroup comparison | |||||||
Wang et al., 2015 | RCT | 55/53/51/53 | 1–18 years | L. paracasei 2 × 109 cfu vs. L. fermentum 2 × 109 cfu vs. L. paracasei + L. fermentum 4 × 109 cfu vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | L. paracasei: −25 points |
L. fermentum: −24 points | |||||||
L. paracasei + L. fermentum: −28 points | |||||||
Inflammatory Markers | Placebo: −15 points | ||||||
Treatment groups demonstrated lower SCORAD index after treatment when compared to placebo (p < 0.001). | |||||||
IL-4 levels decreased after probiotic treatment (p = 0.04). | |||||||
Wu et al., 2012 | RCT | 27/27 | 2–14 years | Synbiotic (L. salivarius 4 × 109 cfu with prebiotic) vs. prebiotic alone | 8 weeks | SCORAD at 8 weeks | Synbiotic: 27 at week 8. |
Prebiotic: 36 at week 8 | |||||||
Significant group differences in SCORAD at week 8 when controlling for baseline (p = 0.02) | |||||||
Woo et al., 2010 | RCT | 41/34 | 2–10 years | L. sakei 1010 cfu vs placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | Probiotic: −31% |
Placebo: −13% | |||||||
Chemokine levels | Significant group differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.01). | ||||||
Treatment group demonstrated improvements in CCL17 and CCL27 (p = 0.03). Levels of cytokines were associated with SCORAD index (p < 0.001). | |||||||
Sistek et al., 2006 | RCT | 25/24 | 1–10 years old | L. rhamnosus and B. lactis 2 × 109 cfu total dosage vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | Ratio of probiotic to placebo treatment at treatment endpoint: 0.8 (p = 0.10). |
In food sensitized children, ratio of probiotic to placebo treatment at treatment endpoint: 0.73 (p = 0.047). | |||||||
Navarro-Lopez et al., 2018 | RCT | 23/24 | 4–17 years old | B. lactis, B. longum, L. casei109 cfu total dosage vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | Probiotic: −83% |
Placebo: −24% | |||||||
Significant group difference in changes in SCORAD (p < 0.001) | |||||||
Passeron et al., 2006 | RCT | 17/22 | 2–12 years old | Prebiotic + L. rhamnosus 1.2 × 109 cfu vs. prebiotic alone | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | Prebiotic + L. rhamnosus: −47% |
Prebiotic: −39% | |||||||
No group differences in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.54) | |||||||
Folster-Holst et al., 2006 | RCT | 22/25 | 1–55 months | LGG 1010cfu vs. placebo | 8 weeks | SCORAD at 8 weeks | Probiotic: −18% |
Placebo: −24% | |||||||
No significant group differences in changes in SCORAD. | |||||||
Wu et al., 2017 | RCT | 30/32 | 4–48 months | L. rhamnosus 350 mg vs. placebo | 8 weeks | SCORAD at 8 weeks | Probiotic: = −22 points |
Placebo: SCORAD = −12 points | |||||||
Significant group differences in SCORAD at week 8 when controlling for baseline (p = 0.01). | |||||||
Shafiei et al., 2011 | RCT | 18/19 | 1–36 months | Synbiotic (7 strain probiotic 1010 cfu + prebiotic) vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | All groups combined showed a significant decrease in SCORAD (−56%; p < 0.01). |
No group differences in changes in SCORAD (p > 0.05) |
Common Probiotics Used for Pediatric Atopic Dermatitis |
---|
L. acidophilus |
L. plantarum |
L. fermentum |
L. rhamnosus |
L. salivarius |
L. sakei |
L. casei |
B. lactis |
Study | Study Type | Treated/Control (N) | Age Range | Vitamin/Mineral Treatment | Treatment Time | Outcome Measures | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Januchowsi, 2009 | RCT | 21 patients total | 6 months–18 years | Topical B12 vs. placebo | 4 weeks | SCORAD at 4 weeks | B12: −4.5 points Placebo: −1.6 points Significant group difference in changes in SCORAD (p = 0.01) |
Mabin et al., 1995 | RCT | 19/22 | 2–15 years | Oral pyridoxine hydrochloride vs. placebo | 4 weeks | Skin severity score, daytime itch, nocturnal itch at 4 weeks | No significant differences between groups in any outcomes at the end of treatment. Skin severity score: p = 0.65 Daytime itch: p = 0.72 Nocturnal itch: p = 0.33 |
Ewing et al., 1991 | RCT | 25/25 | 1–16 years | Oral zinc sulfate vs. placebo | 8 weeks | Surface area affected, degree of erythema, itch at 8 weeks | No change in disease severity across both groups. |
Study | Study Type | Treated/Control (N) | Age Range | Chinese Herb Treatment | Treatment Time | Outcome Measures | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hon et al., 2007 | RCT | 42/43 | 5–21 years | Flos ionicerae, Herba menthae, Cortex moutan, Rhizoma atractylodis, and Cortex phellodendri (TCHM) vs. placebo | 12 weeks | SCORAD at 12 weeks | TCHM: −15% |
Placebo: −18% | |||||||
No significant group differences in SCORAD | |||||||
TCHM group displayed a 1/3rd reduction in the amount of topical corticosteroid used (p = 0.024). | |||||||
Sheehan et al., 1992 | Crossover Trial | 37 | 1–18 years | Ledebouriella seseloides, Potentilla chinensis, Anebia clematidis, Rehmannia glutinosa, Paeonia lactiflora, Lophatherum gracile, Dictamnus dasycarpus, Tribulus terrestris, Glycyrrhiza uralensis, and Schizonepeta tenuifolia (TCHM) vs. placebo | 8 weeks | Extent and severity of erythema and surface damage at 8 weeks | TCHM: 51% decrease in erythema scores and a 49% decrease in surface damage scores |
Placebo: 6.1% decrease in erythema scores and 6.2% decrease in surface damage scores. |
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Adler-Neal, A.L.; Cline, A.; Frantz, T.; Strowd, L.; Feldman, S.R.; Taylor, S. Complementary and Integrative Therapies for Childhood Atopic Dermatitis. Children 2019, 6, 121. https://doi.org/10.3390/children6110121
Adler-Neal AL, Cline A, Frantz T, Strowd L, Feldman SR, Taylor S. Complementary and Integrative Therapies for Childhood Atopic Dermatitis. Children. 2019; 6(11):121. https://doi.org/10.3390/children6110121
Chicago/Turabian StyleAdler-Neal, Adrienne L., Abigail Cline, Travis Frantz, Lindsay Strowd, Steven R. Feldman, and Sarah Taylor. 2019. "Complementary and Integrative Therapies for Childhood Atopic Dermatitis" Children 6, no. 11: 121. https://doi.org/10.3390/children6110121
APA StyleAdler-Neal, A. L., Cline, A., Frantz, T., Strowd, L., Feldman, S. R., & Taylor, S. (2019). Complementary and Integrative Therapies for Childhood Atopic Dermatitis. Children, 6(11), 121. https://doi.org/10.3390/children6110121