How we treat atopic dermatitis now and how that will change over the next 5 years.
Carsten FlohrPublished in: The British journal of dermatology (2022)
We live in exciting times in atopic dermatitis therapeutics, with many novel treatments in the clinical trial pipeline. Frustratingly, most of these trials are vehicle- or placebo-controlled, rather than head-to-head comparisons. Network meta-analyses can rank treatments against each other, even for placebo-controlled studies, aiding evidence-based guideline formulation and clinical decision-making. Treatment registries are an important additional vehicle to collect 'real-world' data on the long-term (cost) effectiveness and safety of the new drugs, outside of the stringent and short-term settings of clinical trials. As further agents enter clinical practice, the need for biomarkers of treatment response and drug safety becomes more pressing to move us towards personalized medicine and to avoid wasting healthcare resources. This review takes stock of our current treatment armamentarium for atopic dermatitis, highlights important gaps in our knowledge - including the relatively low number of studies conducted in children - and maps out how our treatment approaches for atopic dermatitis can become more targeted and holistic in the future.
Keyphrases
- atopic dermatitis
- clinical trial
- healthcare
- double blind
- placebo controlled
- clinical practice
- decision making
- study protocol
- systematic review
- squamous cell carcinoma
- randomized controlled trial
- meta analyses
- small molecule
- electronic health record
- optic nerve
- big data
- deep learning
- drug induced
- health insurance
- adverse drug