Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial

Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulvovaginal region (ELPV) is a rare chronic inflammatory condition causing painful raw areas that can lead to scarring, at the vaginal entrance. Symptoms considerably impact upon daily function and quality of life. There is risk of cancerous change in affected sk...

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Main Author: Simpson, Rosalind C.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28301/
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author Simpson, Rosalind C.
author_facet Simpson, Rosalind C.
author_sort Simpson, Rosalind C.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulvovaginal region (ELPV) is a rare chronic inflammatory condition causing painful raw areas that can lead to scarring, at the vaginal entrance. Symptoms considerably impact upon daily function and quality of life. There is risk of cancerous change in affected skin of 1-3%. A Cochrane Systematic Review, published in 2012, found no randomised controlled trials (RCT) on which to base treatment for ELPV. Retrospective case series suggest that super-potent topical corticosteroids are frequently used as first-line therapy, although one third of patients fail to respond adequately and require escalation of therapy. There is clinical uncertainty regarding which second-line therapies should be used. The following steps were taken to inform the design of an RCT to determine optimal second-line therapy for EVLP resistant to topical steroids: • A multi-centre retrospective review and audit of case notes to assess current clinical management in the UK. • A qualitative investigation with UK clinicians to establish their views and principles of management of ELPV. • An international multi-disciplinary electronic-delphi consensus exercise to agree a set of diagnostic criteria for ELPV. • A systematic review to assess existing outcome measure tools that have been used in randomised controlled trials of vulval skin disorders. • Assessment of patients views through a survey of a national patient group and subsequent focus groups with patients. The resulting multi-centre, four-armed, open-label, pragmatic randomised controlled trial will compare hydroxychloroquine, methotrexate and mycophenolate mofetil against a standard care group of clobetasol propionate 0.05% plus a short course of oral prednisolone. This will be the first RCT to test systemic agents for patients with ELPV and will add to the existing evidence base. The methodologies employed to develop the RCT protocol, and the trial design itself, may act as a template for clinical research into the therapeutic management of other rare inflammatory conditions.
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spelling nottingham-283012025-02-28T11:33:20Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28301/ Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial Simpson, Rosalind C. Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulvovaginal region (ELPV) is a rare chronic inflammatory condition causing painful raw areas that can lead to scarring, at the vaginal entrance. Symptoms considerably impact upon daily function and quality of life. There is risk of cancerous change in affected skin of 1-3%. A Cochrane Systematic Review, published in 2012, found no randomised controlled trials (RCT) on which to base treatment for ELPV. Retrospective case series suggest that super-potent topical corticosteroids are frequently used as first-line therapy, although one third of patients fail to respond adequately and require escalation of therapy. There is clinical uncertainty regarding which second-line therapies should be used. The following steps were taken to inform the design of an RCT to determine optimal second-line therapy for EVLP resistant to topical steroids: • A multi-centre retrospective review and audit of case notes to assess current clinical management in the UK. • A qualitative investigation with UK clinicians to establish their views and principles of management of ELPV. • An international multi-disciplinary electronic-delphi consensus exercise to agree a set of diagnostic criteria for ELPV. • A systematic review to assess existing outcome measure tools that have been used in randomised controlled trials of vulval skin disorders. • Assessment of patients views through a survey of a national patient group and subsequent focus groups with patients. The resulting multi-centre, four-armed, open-label, pragmatic randomised controlled trial will compare hydroxychloroquine, methotrexate and mycophenolate mofetil against a standard care group of clobetasol propionate 0.05% plus a short course of oral prednisolone. This will be the first RCT to test systemic agents for patients with ELPV and will add to the existing evidence base. The methodologies employed to develop the RCT protocol, and the trial design itself, may act as a template for clinical research into the therapeutic management of other rare inflammatory conditions. 2015-07-10 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28301/1/4174644%20RSimpson%20PhD%20Thesis%20Dec%202014.pdf Simpson, Rosalind C. (2015) Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Dermatology Vulva Genital Erosive lichen planus Randomised controlled trial Outcome measures Diagnostic criteria Focus group Qualitative Quantitative
spellingShingle Dermatology
Vulva
Genital
Erosive lichen planus
Randomised controlled trial
Outcome measures
Diagnostic criteria
Focus group
Qualitative
Quantitative
Simpson, Rosalind C.
Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial
title Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial
title_full Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial
title_fullStr Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial
title_short Erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial
title_sort erosive lichen planus affecting the vulva: defining the disease, developing outcome measures and designing a randomised controlled trial
topic Dermatology
Vulva
Genital
Erosive lichen planus
Randomised controlled trial
Outcome measures
Diagnostic criteria
Focus group
Qualitative
Quantitative
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28301/