Chinese medicine combined with calcipotriol betamethasone and calcipotriol
ointment for Psoriasis vulgaris (CMCBCOP): study protocol for a randomized
controlled trial.
Author(s): Wen ZH, Xuan ML, Yan YH, Li XY, Yao DN, Li G, Guo XF, Ou AH, Lu CJ(1).
Affiliation(s): Author information:
(1)Department of Dermatology, Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine, 111
Dade Road, Guangzhou 510120, China. luchuanjian888@vip.sina.com.
Publication date & source: 2014, Trials. , 15:294
BACKGROUND: Psoriasis causes worldwide concern because of its high-prevalence, as
well as its harmful, and incurable characteristics. Topical therapy is a
conventional treatment for psoriasis vulgaris. Chinese medicine (CM) has been
commonly used in an integrative way for psoriasis patients for many years. Some
CM therapies have shown therapeutic effects for psoriasis vulgaris (PV),
including relieving symptoms and improving quality of life, and may reduce the
relapse rate. However, explicit evidence has not yet been obtained. The purpose
of the present trial is to examine the efficacy and safety of the YXBCM01
granule, a compound Chinese herbal medicine, with a combination of topical
therapy for PV patients.
METHODS/DESIGN: Using an add-on design, the trial is to evaluate whether the
YXBCM01 granule combined topical therapy is more effective than topical therapy
alone for the treatment of PV. The study design is a double-blind, parallel,
randomized controlled trial comparing the YXBCM01 granule (5.5 g twice daily) to
a placebo. The duration of treatment is 12 weeks. A total of 600 participants
will be randomly allocated into two groups, YXBCM01 granule group and placebo
group, from 11 general or dermatological hospitals in China. Topical use of
calcipotriol betamethasone for the first 4 weeks and calcipotriol ointment for
the remaining 8 weeks will be the same standard therapy for the two groups.
Patients will be enrolled if they have a clinical diagnosis of PV, a psoriasis
area severe index (PASI) of more than 10 or body surface area (BSA) of more than
10%, but PASI of less than 30 and BSA of less than 30%, are aged between 18 and
65-years-old, and provide signed informed consent. The primary outcome, relapse
rate, is based on PASI assessed blindly during the treatment. Secondary outcomes
include: (i) relapse time interval, (ii) time to onset, (iii) rebound rate, (iv)
PASI score, (v) cumulative consumption of medicine, (vi) the dermatology quality
life index (DLQI), and (vii) the medical outcomes study (MOS) item short form
health survey (SF-36). Analysis will be on intention-to-treat and per-protocol
subject analysis principles.
DISCUSSION: To address the effectual remission of the YXBCM01 granule for PV,
this trial may provide a novel regimen for PV patients if the granule can
decrease relapse rate without more adverse effects.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (http://cwww.chictr.org):
ChiCTR-TRC-13003233, registered 26 May 2013.
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