The European treatment of severe atopic eczema in children taskforce (TREAT) survey in collaboration with the European Dermato-Epidemiology Network (EDEN)

Laura Proudfoot, Alex Powell, Salma Ahmed Mohamed Ayis, S. Barbarot, E. Baselga Torres, M. Deleuran, R Folster-Holst, C. Gelmetti, A Hernández-Martin, M. A. Middelkamp-Hup, Arnold P Oranje, K. Logan, M Perkins, A Patrizi, G. Rovatti, O. Schofield, P Spuls, Annemette Lyng Svensson, Cindy Vestergaard, Carl-Fredrik WahlgrenJ Schmitt, Carsten Flohr

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

90 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background

There is a paucity of evidence for the use of systemic agents in children with atopic eczema refractory to conventional therapy, resulting in considerable variation in patient management.
Objectives

The European TREatment of severe Atopic eczema in children Taskforce (TREAT) survey was established to collect data on current prescribing practice, to identify factors influencing the use of specific systemic agents, and to inform the design of a clinically relevant intervention study.
Methods

Consultant physician members of the paediatric dermatology societies and interest groups of eight European countries were invited to participate in a web-based survey. The multiple-response format questionnaire collated data on clinical practice in general, as well as detailed information on the use of systemic agents in refractory paediatric atopic eczema.
Results

In total, 343/765 members (44·8%) responded to the invitational emails; 89·2% were dermatologists and 71% initiate systemic immunosuppression for children with severe atopic eczema. The first-line drugs of choice were ciclosporin (43·0%), oral corticosteroids (30·7%) and azathioprine (21·7%). Ciclosporin was also the most commonly used second-line medication (33·6%), with methotrexate ranked as most popular third choice (26·2%). Around half of the respondents (53·7%) replied that they routinely test and treat reservoirs of cutaneous infection prior to starting systemic treatment. Across the eight countries, penicillins were the first-line antibiotic of choice (78·3%).
Conclusions

In the absence of a clear evidence base, the European TREAT survey confirms the wide variation in prescribing practice of systemic immunosuppression in refractory paediatric atopic eczema. The results will be used to inform the design of a randomized controlled trial relevant to patient management across Europe.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)901–909
JournalBritish Journal of Dermatology
Volume169
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2013

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