Publications

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

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Systematic review of treatments for chronic spontaneous urticaria with inadequate response to licensed first-line treatments

Filename 101. Mitchell et al., Syst. review in CSU, Intl J Derm 2015.pdf
Filesize 823.65 KB
Version r.101
Date added June 23, 2020
Downloaded 0 times
Category Reviews
Authors Mitchell, S., Balp, M. M., Samuel, M., McBride, D., and Maurer, M.
Citation Mitchell, S., Balp, M. M., Samuel, M., McBride, D., and Maurer, M.: Systematic review of treatments for chronic spontaneous urticaria with inadequate response to licensed first-line treatments. Int. J. Dermatol. 2015: 54; 1088-1104.
DocNum r.101
DocType PDF
Edition; Page 54; 1088-1104
IF 1..41
Publisher Int. J. Dermatol.
ReleaseDate 2015

Background Patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are sometimes unresponsive to nonsedating, second-generation, H1 antihistamines; this study summarizes published clinical evidence for patients who remain symptomatic despite treatment. Objective To evaluate, via a systematic literature review, clinical evidence of management strategies for patients with CSU who remain symptomatic despite approved use of nonsedating H1 antihistamines.

Methods Using a prespecified protocol, we searched MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Library (1 January 1960–20 December 2011), and published conference abstracts (2010–2012). Rigorous criteria identified trials in patients with CSU who had a history of inadequate response to previous treatment or had used combination treatments. Trials evaluating treatment-na€ıve patients or first-line therapies were excluded.

Results Qualitative data synthesized from 26 randomized, controlled trials, four prospective studies, and one retrospective study showed cyclosporine, desloratadine plus dapsone or dipyridamole, montelukast, and omalizumab reduced urticaria activity scores, weals, and pruritus, versus placebo. Optimal treatment doses and durations were unclear due to varying trial durations, outcome measurement scales, and assessment timings. No safety concerns were reported.

Conclusions This review confirms that available evidence to guide treatment choice for patients with CSU with inadequate response to H1 antihistamines varies in quality. Further research is warranted due to low-quality trials with methodological and reporting limitations.

 

(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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