Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo

Vitiligo is the most common skin disorder resulting in depigmentation, but high-quality research is lacking. A Cochrane review of interventions for vitiligo published in 2010 highlighted methodological limitations with existing trials; which have generally been too small and heterogeneous to inform...

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Main Author: Eleftheriadou, Viktoria
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13378/
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author Eleftheriadou, Viktoria
author_facet Eleftheriadou, Viktoria
author_sort Eleftheriadou, Viktoria
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Vitiligo is the most common skin disorder resulting in depigmentation, but high-quality research is lacking. A Cochrane review of interventions for vitiligo published in 2010 highlighted methodological limitations with existing trials; which have generally been too small and heterogeneous to inform clinical recommendations. The objective of this thesis was to improve the evidence base for the treatment of vitiligo. This PhD was funded by the National Institute for Health Research, as part of the research programme called “Setting Priorities and Reducing Uncertainties for people with Skin Diseases”. It includes the following: 1) identifying the most important research priorities for patients and clinicians, thereby informing the research agenda; 2) conducting a systematic review of outcome measures used in vitiligo trials and a survey of the most desirable outcomes for patients and clinicians; and 3) conducting a pilot double blind, randomised controlled trial (RCT) on home hand-held phototherapy in preparation of the first national multi-centre RCT for the treatment of vitiligo. For the prioritisation exercise, a total of 660 treatment uncertainties were submitted by 460 patients and clinicians. The identified priority areas included interventions such as combination of topical agents and phototherapy. The systematic review on outcome measures identified 25 different domains that had been used in previous trials. Although percentage repigmentation was measured in 96%; 48 different scales had been used. In contrast, patients and clinicians favoured the use of “cosmetically acceptable” repigmentation. Finally, a 4-month pilot trial recruited 29 participants and tested the logistics of running a future RCT. This work resulted in a commissioned call and funding of a national RCT on vitiligo (topical corticosteroids in combination with home hand-held phototherapy); the initiation of an international consensus exercise on core outcome measures for use in vitiligo trials; and informed the design and conduct of a future national RCT.
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spelling nottingham-133782025-02-28T11:24:50Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13378/ Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo Eleftheriadou, Viktoria Vitiligo is the most common skin disorder resulting in depigmentation, but high-quality research is lacking. A Cochrane review of interventions for vitiligo published in 2010 highlighted methodological limitations with existing trials; which have generally been too small and heterogeneous to inform clinical recommendations. The objective of this thesis was to improve the evidence base for the treatment of vitiligo. This PhD was funded by the National Institute for Health Research, as part of the research programme called “Setting Priorities and Reducing Uncertainties for people with Skin Diseases”. It includes the following: 1) identifying the most important research priorities for patients and clinicians, thereby informing the research agenda; 2) conducting a systematic review of outcome measures used in vitiligo trials and a survey of the most desirable outcomes for patients and clinicians; and 3) conducting a pilot double blind, randomised controlled trial (RCT) on home hand-held phototherapy in preparation of the first national multi-centre RCT for the treatment of vitiligo. For the prioritisation exercise, a total of 660 treatment uncertainties were submitted by 460 patients and clinicians. The identified priority areas included interventions such as combination of topical agents and phototherapy. The systematic review on outcome measures identified 25 different domains that had been used in previous trials. Although percentage repigmentation was measured in 96%; 48 different scales had been used. In contrast, patients and clinicians favoured the use of “cosmetically acceptable” repigmentation. Finally, a 4-month pilot trial recruited 29 participants and tested the logistics of running a future RCT. This work resulted in a commissioned call and funding of a national RCT on vitiligo (topical corticosteroids in combination with home hand-held phototherapy); the initiation of an international consensus exercise on core outcome measures for use in vitiligo trials; and informed the design and conduct of a future national RCT. 2013-07-17 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13378/1/Dr_VE_PhD_Dermatology_2013_FINAL.pdf Eleftheriadou, Viktoria (2013) Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Eleftheriadou, Viktoria
Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo
title Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo
title_full Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo
title_fullStr Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo
title_full_unstemmed Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo
title_short Setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo
title_sort setting priorities and reducing uncertainties for the treatment of vitiligo
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13378/