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A prospective short-term study to evaluate methodologies for the assessment of disease extent, impact, and wound evolution in patients with dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
by
Johnson, Ramsey
, Paller, Amy S.
, Malyala, Anna
, Landy, Hal
, Rudin, Dan
, Murrell, Dedee F.
, Pope, Elena
, Ramsdell, Deborah
in
Care and treatment
/ Clinician-assessed outcomes
/ Development and progression
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease
/ Disease severity
/ Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
/ Epidermolysis bullosa
/ Human Genetics
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Outcome measures
/ Pain
/ Patient-reported outcomes
/ Patients
/ Periodic health examinations
/ Pharmacology/Toxicology
/ Physical diagnosis
/ Quality of life
/ Rare diseases
/ Rare skin diseases
/ Skin
/ Wounds
/ Wounds and injuries
2022
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A prospective short-term study to evaluate methodologies for the assessment of disease extent, impact, and wound evolution in patients with dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
by
Johnson, Ramsey
, Paller, Amy S.
, Malyala, Anna
, Landy, Hal
, Rudin, Dan
, Murrell, Dedee F.
, Pope, Elena
, Ramsdell, Deborah
in
Care and treatment
/ Clinician-assessed outcomes
/ Development and progression
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease
/ Disease severity
/ Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
/ Epidermolysis bullosa
/ Human Genetics
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Outcome measures
/ Pain
/ Patient-reported outcomes
/ Patients
/ Periodic health examinations
/ Pharmacology/Toxicology
/ Physical diagnosis
/ Quality of life
/ Rare diseases
/ Rare skin diseases
/ Skin
/ Wounds
/ Wounds and injuries
2022
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A prospective short-term study to evaluate methodologies for the assessment of disease extent, impact, and wound evolution in patients with dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
by
Johnson, Ramsey
, Paller, Amy S.
, Malyala, Anna
, Landy, Hal
, Rudin, Dan
, Murrell, Dedee F.
, Pope, Elena
, Ramsdell, Deborah
in
Care and treatment
/ Clinician-assessed outcomes
/ Development and progression
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease
/ Disease severity
/ Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
/ Epidermolysis bullosa
/ Human Genetics
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Outcome measures
/ Pain
/ Patient-reported outcomes
/ Patients
/ Periodic health examinations
/ Pharmacology/Toxicology
/ Physical diagnosis
/ Quality of life
/ Rare diseases
/ Rare skin diseases
/ Skin
/ Wounds
/ Wounds and injuries
2022
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A prospective short-term study to evaluate methodologies for the assessment of disease extent, impact, and wound evolution in patients with dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
Journal Article
A prospective short-term study to evaluate methodologies for the assessment of disease extent, impact, and wound evolution in patients with dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
2022
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Overview
Background
Standardized assessments for dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (DEB) are needed. This prospective, multicenter, 4-week, observational study was designed to evaluate DEB assessments for suitability as clinical trial endpoints.
Methods
Patients with confirmed DEB diagnosis and ≥ 5 measurable wounds were included. The primary outcome was change from baseline in wound surface area (WSA) of 5 selected wounds by 3-dimensional imaging. Secondary endpoints were change from baseline in clinician global assessment (CGA) of WSA, wound characteristics, disease-related questionnaires and instruments (disease severity, quality of life [QoL], pain and disability, and itch), and tolerability of procedures.
Results
Of 30 enrolled patients, 29 completed the study (of whom, 28 had recessive DEB). Median age was 17.8 years (range, 3.8–58.7). All patients developed new or recurrent wounds during the 4-week study. Of the wounds selected at baseline, 45/150 (30.0%) healed by week 2; an additional 38 healed by week 4, while 8 of those healed at week 2 had recurred by week 4 for a total of 75/150 (50.0%) healed wounds at week 4. Mean values for WSA, CGA, and disease-related questionnaire and instrument scores remained steady during this 4-week observational study. Of the 10 disease-related questionnaires and instruments assessed, the scores for the Epidermolysis Bullosa Disease Activity and Scarring Index (EBDASI) and the Instrument for Scoring Clinical Outcomes for Research of Epidermolysis Bullosa (iscorEB) did not substantially overlap between moderate and severe disease. Between mild and moderate disease, only the EBDASI scores did not substantially overlap.
Conclusions
These results stress the dynamic nature of wounds, even during a 4-week period of observation, and suggest that a combination of clinician-assessed outcomes and patient-/caregiver-reported outcomes is needed to provide a comprehensive assessment of DEB severity and impact. In addition, these results support the use of EBDASI and iscorEB to monitor disease severity as both produced scores that did not substantially overlap between disease severity strata.
Clinical trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov,
NCT02178969
. Registered 4 June 2014,
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02178969
.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
/ Disease
/ Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
/ Medicine
/ Methods
/ Pain
/ Patients
/ Periodic health examinations
/ Skin
/ Wounds
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