Once daily topical treatment of psoriasis with tacalcitol ointment (4 micrograms/g) was compared with twice daily treatment with calcipotriol ointment (50 micrograms/g) in a double-blind, randomized study over a treatment period of 8 weeks. The severity of pruritus, erythema, infiltration and scaling was scored on a scale from 0 to 4. These features were scored at the initiation of treatment, after 2, 4, 6 and 8 weeks of treatment, and at 4 weeks after discontinuation of treatment. The sum score was the total score for erythema, infiltration and scaling. Serum levels of calcium, phosphate, ionized calcium and intact parathyroid hormone were used as safety parameters. Two hundred and eighty-seven adults with stable plaque psoriasis participated and were treated at least once. Both tacalcitol and calcipotriol ointments effectively reduced the severity of psoriasis. The mean reduction in the sum score in the intention-to-treat population of 287 patients was 4.03 in the group treated with tacalcitol compared with 5.05 in the group treated with calcipotriol. The mean baseline sum scores were 7.64 and 7.15, respectively. The acceptability of both ointments was excellent, and none of the patients had adverse effects in terms of increased serum calcium or other alterations in calcium metabolism. Although less effective than calcipotriol ointment used twice daily, tacalcitol ointment is an effective and useful once daily treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis.
There are varying reports on the prevalence of risk factors in porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT). We reviewed 84 patients with PCT in a restricted uptake area in Gothenburg, Sweden and evaluated different potential risk factors for the disease and complications. Besides a thorough medical history, the patients were investigated with urinary porphyrin analyses, transferrin saturation, ferritin and liver tests. Subsamples of patients were tested for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (n = 68), haemochromatosis gene mutations (n = 58) and with the oral glucose tolerance test (n = 31). We found a prevalence of about 1 patient with PCT in 10 000 inhabitants. Nineteen (23%) patients reported heredity for PCT. Identified risk factors were alcohol abuse (38% of male patients), oestrogen treatment (55% of female patients), anti-hepatitis C virus positivity (29% of male patients), diabetes (17%) or impaired glucose tolerance (45% of tested patients) and haemochromatosis gene mutations (57% of tested patients). All patients positive for anti-hepatitis C virus belonged to the non-hereditary group. During follow-up we observed a high incidence of stroke, no case of hepatocellular carcinoma and a normal life expectancy.
A mother and her two daughters were all afflicted by congenital nonbullous ichthyosis. The clinical and ultrastructural picture are in accordance with recessive congenital ichthyosiform erythroderma. The mode of inheritance for the children is assumed to be by pseudo-dominance. Nonbullous congenital ichthyosiform erythroderma and lamellar ichthyosis are probably heterogeneous.
High-dose chloroquine therapy for porphyria cutanea tarda is rarely used now because of its hepatic side-effects. The mechanisms of the effects and side-effects are poorly understood. We describe here effects, side-effects and long-term follow-up in 57 patients with a first-time diagnosis of porphyria cutanea tarda treated with 1-3 phlebotomies followed by 250 mg chloroquine phosphate daily for 7 days. A hepatotoxic reaction with high serum aminotransferases occurred in almost all patients. Within 3 months, clinical remission was obtained in all patients, and biochemical remission in almost all patients. Relapse occurred in 27 patients after 0.5-12 years. Subjective side-effects occurred more frequently in women, who also had higher maximum ALAT, ferritin and uroporphyrin values during treatment. Both subjective side-effects and ALAT during treatment correlated with pre-treatment uroporphyrin excretion and maximum uroporphyrin during treatment, but not with markers of hereditary haemochromatosis.
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