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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Comparative efficacy of once-daily flurandrenolide tape versus twice-daily diflorasone diacetate ointment in the treatment of psoriasis.

BACKGROUND: Flurandrenolide tape has recently been listed as a group I topical corticosteroid. There are no studies that compare this product to group I ointments in the treatment of steroid-responsive dermatoses. OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to determine the relative efficacy of flurandrenolide (4 microg/cm2) tape versus 0.05% diflorasone diacetate ointment in plaque psoriasis. METHODS: Thirty patients participated in an investigator-blinded, randomized, bilateral paired-comparison study of flurandrenolide tape applied to lesions of one side of the body once daily for up to 16 hours versus diflorasone diacetate ointment applied contralaterally twice daily. Lesions were assessed at baseline, then reevaluated at 2 and 4 weeks. RESULTS: Flurandrenolide tape-treated plaques showed consistently greater clearing in terms of erythema, scaling, induration, and treatment success for all plaques, as well as the subset of knee and elbow plaques, when compared with the lesions receiving diflorasone diacetate ointment. CONCLUSION: The efficacy of flurandrenolide tape in the treatment of psoriatic plaques surpasses that of diflorasone diacetate ointment.[1]

References

  1. Comparative efficacy of once-daily flurandrenolide tape versus twice-daily diflorasone diacetate ointment in the treatment of psoriasis. Krueger, G.G., O'Reilly, M.A., Weidner, M., Dromgoole, S.H., Killey, F.P. J. Am. Acad. Dermatol. (1998) [Pubmed]
 
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