The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the feasibility of low-sodium diet to improve eczema severity. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does a low-sodium diet improve eczema severity? * How does a low-sodium diet impact skin sodium concentration? * Is skin sodium concentration associated with eczema severity? Researchers will ask all participant to follow a low-sodium diet, then compare sodium tablets to a placebo (a look-alike substance that contains no drug) to specifically examine the impact of altering sodium intake. Participants will: * Follow a low-salt diet for the duration of the 24-week study * Take sodium chloride tablets every day for 5 weeks followed by a placebo every day for 5 weeks after a 2-week washout period, or vice versa * Complete up to 4 virtual check-in visits * Visit the clinic 4 times to answer questionnaires, provide bio samples, complete dietary recalls, and undergo non-contrast sodium MRI
The central hypothesis of this proposal is that excess dietary sodium (consumed primarily as salt) is concentrated in the skin as a physiologic response to poor barrier function, and that a low-sodium diet can improve eczema severity. The study will recruit 40 individuals (10 healthy participants, 30 with moderate-severe atopic dermatitis) and follow them to identify factors associated with skin sodium storage. All participants will be counseled on how to follow a low-sodium diet for 24 weeks. After 12 weeks on the diet alone, they will be asked to add daily tablets in a self-controlled cross-over design. Participants will be randomized in equal groups to either start with sodium tables or placebo tablets. One group will receive sodium tablets for weeks 13-17, no tablets for a washout period during weeks 18-19, then placebo tablets for weeks 20-24. The other group will receive placebo tablets for weeks 13-17, no tablets for a washout period during weeks 18-19, then sodium tablets for weeks 20-24. Sodium consumption will be evaluated using dietary recall questionnaires and urine biomarkers, skin sodium concentration will be measured using a non-invasive sodium MRI technique, and eczema activity and severity will be measured using multiple patient-reported outcomes and clinician scores. To test the hypothesis that the low-sodium DASH diet improves eczema severity, we will compare eczema severity before and after the 12-week low-sodium dietary intervention. As secondary objectives, we will also test whether increases in dietary sodium administered as sodium chloride tablets during the second 12-week study period are associated with increases in skin sodium concentration corresponding to eczema severity, and whether there are protein biomarkers in the skin or blood that are associated with changes in dietary sodium, skin sodium concentration, and/or eczema severity.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
40
During the 5-week long sodium tablet intervention period, participants will receive five 1 g sodium chloride tablets each morning and four 1 g sodium chloride tablets each evening. Each sodium chloride tablet will contain 0.394 g or 17 mmol of sodium.
During the 5-week long placebo period, participants will receive five placebo tablets each morning and four placebo tablets each evening
San Francisco VA Medical Center
San Francisco, California, United States
UCSF Mt Zion Campus
San Francisco, California, United States
Eczema severity
Eczema severity will be measured by the Eczema Area Severity Index (EASI). The score range is 0-72 and higher scores indicate more severe eczema.
Time frame: 6 months
Skin sodium concentration
Skin sodium concentration (mmol/L) will be measured via non-contrast sodium MRI; change in the value after the interventions and mean values between groups will be compared
Time frame: 6 months
Protein biomarkers
Fold-changes in protein biomarkers extracted from skin tape strips and blood will be compared; change in the value after the interventions and mean values between groups will be compared
Time frame: 6 months
Atopic dermatitis severity measured by POEM score
Atopic dermatitis severity will be tracked via assessments at clinic visits and via virtual monthly assessments using the Patient Oriented Eczema Measure (POEM). The POEM score ranges from 0-28 and higher scores indicate more severe atopic dematitis; change in the score after the interventions and mean scores between groups will be compared.
Time frame: 6 months
Atopic dermatitis control measured by mean RECAP score
Atopic dermatitis control will be measured at participant visits using the Recap of Atopic Eczema (RECAP) measure of long term control. Scores range from 0-28, and higher scores indicate more severe atopic dermatitis; change in the score after the interventions and mean scores between groups will be compared.
Time frame: 6 months
Participant-reported itch score
Atopic dermatitis-associated itch will be assessed at clinic visits using the numerical rating score for itch (NRS 11). The range for the NRS is 0-10, and higher scores indicate more severe itch / worse disease; change in the score after the interventions and mean scores between groups will be compared.
Time frame: 6 months
Skin-related quality of life score
Skin-related quality of life will be measured at participant visits using the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI). Scores range from 0-30, and higher scores indicate worse outcomes; change in the score after the interventions and mean scores between groups will be compared.
Time frame: 6 months
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