Publications

Publications, Books, Book Chapters and Reviews by Prof. Marcus Maurer, MD

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Comparison of the efficacy of levocetirizine 5 mg and desloratadine 5 mg in chronic idiopathic urticaria patients

Filename 73. Potter et al, Comparison of the efficacy, Allergy 2009.pdf
Filesize 176.40 KB
Version o.073
Date added May 27, 2020
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Category Original Work
Authors Potter, P. C., Kapp, A., Maurer, M. Guillet, G., Jian, A. M., Hauptmann, P., and Finlay, A. Y.
Citation Potter, P. C., Kapp, A., Maurer, M. Guillet, G., Jian, A. M., Hauptmann, P., and Finlay, A. Y.: Comparison of the efficacy of levocetirizine 5 mg and desloratadine 5 mg in chronic idiopathic urticaria patients. Allergy 2009: 64; 596-604. IF: 6.38
Corresponding authors Potter, P. C.
DocNum O.73
DocType PDF
Edition; Page 64; 596-604
IF 6.38
Publisher Allergy
ReleaseDate 2009

Background: Nonsedating H1-antihistamines are recommended for the treatment of urticaria by the recent EAACI/GA2 LEN/EDF guidelines. The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy, after 4 weeks of treatment, with levocetirizine 5 mg and desloratadine 5 mg, both once daily in the morning, in symptomatic chronic idiopathic urticaria (CIU) patients.

Methods: This multi-center, randomized, double-blind study involved 886 patients (438 on levocetirizine and 448 on desloratadine). The primary objective was to compare their efficacy on the mean pruritus severity score after 1 week of treatment. Mean pruritus severity score over 4 weeks and pruritus duration score, number and size of wheals, mean CIU composite score (sum of the scores for pruritus severity and numbers of wheals), quality of life, and the patients and investigators global satisfaction with treatment, were secondary efficacy measures.

Results: Levocetirizine led to a significantly greater decrease in pruritus severity than desloratadine over the first treatment week; mean pruritus severity scores of 1.02 and 1.18 for levocetirizine and desloratadine, respectively (P < 0.001). Theresult was similar for the entire 4-week treatment period (P = 0.004). In addition, levocetirizine decreased pruritus duration and the mean CIU composite scores to a significantly greater extent than desloratadine during the first week (P = 0.002 and 0.005, respectively) and over the entire study (P = 0.009 and P < 0.05, respectively). Similarly, levocetirizine increased the patients global satisfaction after one and 4 weeks (P = 0.012 and 0.021, respectively), compared with desloratadine. Safety and tolerability were similar in both groups.

Conclusions: Levocetirizine 5 mg was significantly more efficacious than desloratadine 5 mg in the treatment of CIU symptoms.

 

(Last update: 12.2023)

Number of original publications in peer-reviewed journals:580
Number of reviews in peer-reviewed journals:210
Number of publications (original work and reviews) in peer-reviewed journals:790
Cumulative IF for original publications in peer-reviewed journals:4196.39
Cumulative IF for reviews in peer-reviewed journals:1409.32
Cumulative IF of publications (original work & reviews) in peer-reviewed journals:5605.71
Total number of citations: 36,836, h-index: 99 (Web of Science December 2023)36836

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