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  • Oral antimycobacterial therapy in chronic cutaneous sarcoidosis: a randomized, single-masked, placebo-controlled study.

Oral antimycobacterial therapy in chronic cutaneous sarcoidosis: a randomized, single-masked, placebo-controlled study.

JAMA dermatology (2013-07-19)
Wonder P Drake, Kyra Oswald-Richter, Bradley W Richmond, Joan Isom, Victoria E Burke, Holly Algood, Nicole Braun, Thyneice Taylor, Kusum V Pandit, Caroline Aboud, Chang Yu, Naftali Kaminski, Alan S Boyd, Lloyd E King
ABSTRACT

Sarcoidosis is a chronic granulomatous disease for which there are limited therapeutic options. This is the first randomized, placebo-controlled study to demonstrate that antimycobacterial therapy reduces lesion diameter and disease severity among patients with chronic cutaneous sarcoidosis. To evaluate the safety and efficacy of once-daily antimycobacterial therapy on the resolution of chronic cutaneous sarcoidosis lesions. A randomized, placebo-controlled, single-masked trial on 30 patients with symptomatic chronic cutaneous sarcoidosis lesions deemed to require therapeutic intervention. A tertiary referral dermatology center in Nashville, Tennessee. Participants were randomized to receive either the oral concomitant levofloxacin, ethambutol, azithromycin, and rifampin (CLEAR) regimen or a comparative placebo regimen for 8 weeks with a 180-day follow-up. Participants were monitored for absolute change in lesion diameter and decrease in granuloma burden, if present, on completion of therapy. In the intention-to-treat analysis, the CLEAR-treated group had a mean (SD) decrease in lesion diameter of -8.4 (14.0) mm compared with an increase of 0.07 (3.2) mm in the placebo-treated group (P = .05). The CLEAR group had a significant reduction in granuloma burden and experienced a mean (SD) decline of -2.9 (2.5) mm in lesion severity compared with a decline of -0.6 (2.1) mm in the placebo group (P = .02). Antimycobacterial therapy may result in significant reductions in chronic cutaneous sarcoidosis lesion diameter compared with placebo. These observed reductions, associated with a clinically significant improvement in symptoms, were present at the 180-day follow-up period. Transcriptome analysis of sarcoidosis CD4+ T cells revealed reversal of pathways associated with disease severity and enhanced T-cell function following T-cell receptor stimulation. clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01074554.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
Azithromycin, Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material
Azithromycin for peak identification, European Pharmacopoeia (EP) Reference Standard
Azithromycin, European Pharmacopoeia (EP) Reference Standard
Azithromycin for system suitability, European Pharmacopoeia (EP) Reference Standard
Supelco
Levofloxacin, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
Levofloxacin, 98.0-102.0% anhydrous basis (HPLC)