Consensus-based European guidelines for treatment of atopic eczema (atopic dermatitis) in adults and children: part II.
Author(s)
Wollenberg, A.Barbarot, S.
Bieber, T.
Christen-Zaech, S.
Deleuran, M.
Fink-Wagner, A.
Gieler, U.
Girolomoni, G.
Lau, S.
Muraro, A.
Czarnecka-Operacz, M.
Schäfer, T.
Schmid-Grendelmeier, P.
Simon, D.
Szalai, Z.
Szepietowski, J.C.
Taïeb, A.
Torrelo, A.
Werfel, T.
Ring, J.
Keywords
AdultAllergens/toxicity
Anti-Infective Agents/therapeutic use
Anti-Inflammatory Agents/therapeutic use
Child
Consensus
Dermatitis, Atopic/diet therapy
Dermatitis, Atopic/drug therapy
Dermatitis, Atopic/microbiology
Dermatitis, Atopic/therapy
Dermatologic Agents/therapeutic use
Eczema/diet therapy
Eczema/drug therapy
Eczema/microbiology
Eczema/therapy
Europe
Humans
Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use
Immunotherapy
Patient Education as Topic
Practice Guidelines as Topic
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https://serval.unil.ch/notice/serval:BIB_8AFB4F82172EAbstract
This guideline was developed as a joint interdisciplinary European project, including physicians from all relevant disciplines as well as patients. It is a consensus-based guideline, taking available evidence from other guidelines, systematic reviews and published studies into account. This second part of the guideline covers antimicrobial therapy, systemic treatment, allergen-specific immunotherapy, complementary medicine, psychosomatic counselling and educational interventions, whereas the first part covers methods, patient perspective, general measures and avoidance strategies, basic emollient treatment and bathing, dietary intervention, topical anti-inflammatory therapy, phototherapy and antipruritic therapy. Management of AE must consider the individual clinical variability of the disease. Systemic immunosuppressive treatment with cyclosporine, methotrexate, azathioprine and mycophenolic acid is established option for severe refractory cases, and widely available. Biologicals targeting the T helper 2 pathway such as dupilumab may be a safe and effective, disease-modifying alternative when available. Oral drugs such as JAK inhibitors and histamine 4 receptor antagonists are in development. Microbial colonization and superinfection may cause disease exacerbation and can require additional antimicrobial treatment. Allergen-specific immunotherapy with aeroallergens may be considered in selected cases. Psychosomatic counselling is recommended especially in stress-induced exacerbations. Therapeutic patient education ('Eczema school') is recommended for children and adult patients. General measures, basic emollient treatment, bathing, dietary intervention, topical anti-inflammatory therapy, phototherapy and antipruritic therapy have been addressed in the first part of the guideline.Date
2018-06Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/reviewIdentifier
oai:serval.unil.ch:BIB_8AFB4F82172Ehttps://serval.unil.ch/notice/serval:BIB_8AFB4F82172E
info:doi:10.1111/jdv.14888
urn:issn:0926-9959
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