* To evaluate the efficacy of LiceMD for the treatment of head lice in a pediatric population. * To evaluate the safety of LiceMD in a pediatric population.
Head lice, or Pediculus humanus capitis, cause an estimated 6 to 12 million infestations per year in the U.S., most commonly affecting children 3 to 11 years of age. Despite common perceptions, head lice crawl, and cannot hop or fly. For this reason, transmission occurs most often by human head-to-head contact, and much less commonly by the sharing of personal items such as hats, coats, combs, or towels. Because head lice feed on human blood, they cannot live on pets and are only viable 1-2 days on surfaces other than the human head.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
97
Parents/guardians of infested children will provide consent for their child's participation. Infested children whose parents agree to use the investigational product will be enrolled on the experimental arm of the study using the LiceMD product as treatment. Participants will be examined for lice count and scalp irritation the day after the first application, and one and two weeks after the first application.
The most common treatments are pesticide-based, over-the-counter remedies of permethrin (1%), or pyrethrin-based products.After baseline scalp exam for lice count and preexisting signs of irritation, parents who agree to the comparison arm may purchase any other head lice treatment of their choice. All treatments are to be done at home by a parent or guardian. All participants will be examined for lice count and scalp irritation the day after the first application, and one and two weeks after the first application. Participants may also be examined by parents or the school nurse at any time if signs of irritation or re-infestation occur. If the child is still found to be infested during any examination, the school nurse will instruct the parent/guardian to retreat.
Hackensack University Medical Center
Hackensack, New Jersey, United States
Number of Participants Free of Live Head Lice and Free of Viable Eggs
A determination of head lice effectiveness, measured by number of subjects free of live lice and by number of subjects free of viable eggs, was calculated using two week post-treatment data as the primary study outcome. Measurements were calculated at Day 1 (day after first treatment) and Day 14. At diagnosis, 55 subjects had viable eggs with three subjects meeting enrollment criteria for three or more live lice.
Time frame: Day after first treatment and Day 14 of study
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