This is a prospective, randomized controlled trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of low-dose oral propranolol (1 mg/kg/day) combined with monthly intralesional bleomycin injections versus low-dose propranolol monotherapy for the treatment of infantile hemangioma (IH). A total of 260 infants were randomized to either the combination group or the control group. The study aims to determine if the combination therapy offers superior clinical outcomes, including faster regression, better color resolution, and reduced scarring over a 6-month treatment period.
Infantile hemangioma (IH) is the most common benign vascular tumor in infancy. While oral propranolol is the first-line systemic therapy, its efficacy can be limited or slow for certain IHs. Intralesional bleomycin offers a targeted local therapy. This study investigates whether combining low-dose propranolol with local bleomycin injections can enhance therapeutic effects while maintaining a good safety profile. This prospective, randomized, controlled, open-label trial with blinded outcome assessment enrolled 260 infants with IH. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either oral propranolol (1 mg/kg/day) plus monthly intralesional bleomycin (Combination Group) or oral propranolol (1 mg/kg/day) alone (Control Group) for 6 months. The primary objective is to compare the clinical therapeutic effect between the two groups at 6 months. Secondary objectives include evaluating early tumor response, changes in tumor volume and color, long-term scar formation, and the incidence of adverse events. The findings aim to provide robust evidence for a potentially more effective combination treatment strategy for IH.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
260
Oral propranolol at 1 mg/kg/day for 6 months plus intralesional bleomycin (1 mg/mL solution) injected once monthly. The bleomycin dose was 0.2-0.5 mg per injection site, not exceeding a total of 1 mg/kg per session or a cumulative dose of 10 mg.
Oral propranolol hydrochloride solution administered at a dose of 1 mg/kg/day for 6 months.
Wuhan Children's Hospital
Wuhan, Hubei, China
Clinical Therapeutic Effect
Categorized as Complete Regression (\>95% volume reduction), Marked Effectiveness (≥75% to 95% volume reduction), Effective (30% to \<75% reduction), or Ineffective (\<30% reduction). The primary measure is the rate of participants achieving Complete Regression or Marked Effectiveness.
Time frame: 6 Months
Early Tumor Surface Atrophy
Assessed by comparing photographs and graded as Obvious Atrophy, Mild Atrophy, or No Obvious Change.
Time frame: 24 hours after the first treatment
Change in Hemangioma Color Score
Rated on a 4-point subjective scale (0-3) based on standardized digital photographs, where a lower score indicates color closer to normal skin. The change from baseline is assessed.
Time frame: Baseline, 6 Months
Change in Tumor Volume
Measured in cubic centimeters (cm³) using high-frequency color Doppler ultrasound (Volume = length × width × height × 0.52). The change from baseline is assessed.
Time frame: Baseline, 6 Months
Vancouver Scar Scale (VSS) Score
Assessed at the former hemangioma site. The VSS evaluates pigmentation, vascularity, pliability, and height, with a total score from 0 (normal skin) to 13 (worst scar). Lower scores indicate better outcomes.
Time frame: 6 Months
Incidence of Adverse Events
Number and type of local and systemic adverse events reported by guardians or observed clinically (e.g., injection site reactions, bradycardia, hypoglycemia, sleep disturbances).
Time frame: Through study completion (6 months)
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.