Combined treatment of psoriasis with a new aromatic retinoid (Tigason) in low dosage orally and triamcinolone acetonide cream topically: a double-blind trial

H. J. van der Rhee, J. G. Tijssen, W. A. Herrmann, A. H. Waterman, M. K. Polano

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Abstract

In a multicentre double-blind trial the effect of three therapy regimens was studied for 6 weeks in ninety psoriasis patients: (1) aromatic retinoid (Ro 10-9359) orally (0.50-0.66 mg/kg body weight) and placebo cream topically; (2) aromatic retinoid (Ro 10-9359) (same dosage) with 0.1% triamcinolone acetonide and 5% salicylic acid in lanette wax cream; (3) placebo capsules with 0.1% triamcinolone acetonide and 5% salicylic acid in lanette wax cream. Regimen 1 had virtually no effect and regimen 2 gave better results than regimen 3 for almost all parameters, although statistical significance was reached for only some of them. The 6 week double-blind period was followed by an open study in which all patients were treated according to regimen 2. The clinical result could be maintained up to the end of the study (18 weeks), when more than 60% of the patients showed good to excellant (80-100%) improvement. Most of the side-effects of retinoid were mild and relatively rare. It is concluded that the combination of the aromatic retinoid (Ro 10-9359) given in low dosage orally with corticosteroids topically is as effective as therapy with the retinoid in high dosage alone, but with markedly less side-effects
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)203-212
JournalBritish Journal of Dermatology
Volume102
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 1980

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