Alopecia areata (AA) is a disease characterized by hair cycle dysfunction and the presence of peribulbar and perifollicular mononuclear cell infiltrate.1 The majority of patients report the rapid onset of one or several well-defined, usually round, 1 to 4 cm areas of scalp hair loss. A common feature is the presence of "exclamation-mark" hairs that are broken and short hairs that taper proximally. Commonly used treatment modalities are steroids (intra-lesional, topical or systemic), contact immunotherapy, anthraline, minoxidil, calcineurine inhibitors, topical retinoids, systemic immune modulating agents, photo-chemotherapy, dermatography wigs and hypnotherapy etc Apremilast is a newer drug. It is an oral small-molecule inhibitor of phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE4), this may be effective treatment for a variety of inflammatory skin disorders such as alopecia areata.
Due to its increasing prevalence and lack of local data on its long term management, the investigators designed current study On Efficacy of Oral Apremilast in Alopecia areata in-order to evaluate its effectiveness.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
Patients will be given Oral Apremilast 30 mg twice daily after 05 days titration dose.
JPMC
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Efficacy of Oral Apremilast in the treatment of Alopecia Areata at the Tertiary Care Hospital, Karachi
Efficacy of Oral Apremilast for 12 weeks in alopecia areata will be assessed by using SALT score ( Severity of Alopecia Tool). The SALT score is computed by measuring the percentage of hair loss in each of 4 areas of the scalp-vertex (40%), right profile (18%), left profile (18%), and posterior (24%)-and adding the total to achieve a composite score
Time frame: It will be assessed upto 12 weeks
Mean difference of Salt score before and after the treatment
SALT score difference before and after the treatment will be measured
Time frame: it will be assessed upto 12 weeks
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