Applied Evidence

A practical guide to hidradenitis suppurativa

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Short-term systemic corticosteroid tapers (eg, prednisone, starting at 0.5-1 mg/kg) are recommended to treat flares. Long-term corticosteroids and cyclosporine are reserved for patients with severe refractory disease; however, due to safety concerns, their regular use is strongly discouraged.63,64,85 There is limited evidence to support the use of methotrexate for severe refractory disease, and its use is not recommended.63

Hormonal therapy

The use of hormonal therapy for HS is limited by the low-quality evidence (eg, anecdotal evidence, small retrospective analyses, uncontrolled trials).33,63 The only exception is a small double-blind controlled crossover trial from 1986 showing that the antiandrogen effects of combination oral contraceptives (ethinyloestradiol 50 mcg/cyproterone acetate in a reverse sequential regimen and ethinyloestradiol 50 mcg/norgestrel 500 mcg) improved HS lesions.89

Spironolactone, an antiandrogen diuretic, has been studied in small case report series with a high risk for bias. It is used mainly in female patients with mild or moderate disease, or in combination with other agents in patients with severe HS. Further research is needed to determine its utility in the treatment of HS.63,90,91

Metformin, alone or in combination with other therapies (dapsone, finasteride, liraglutide), has been analyzed in small prospective studies of primarily female patients with different severities of HS, obesity, and PCOS. These studies have shown improvement in lesions, QOL, and reduction of workdays lost.92,93

Finasteride. Studies have shown finasteride (1.25-5 mg/d) alone or in combination with other treatments (metformin, liraglutide, levonorgestrel-ethinyl estradiol, and dapsone) provided varying degrees of resolution or improvement in patients with severe and advanced HS. Finasteride has been used for 4 to 16 weeks with a good safety profile.92,94-96

Continue to: Retinoids

Pages

Recommended Reading

‘Slugging’: A TikTok skin trend that has some merit
MDedge Family Medicine
Rosacea and the gut: Looking into SIBO
MDedge Family Medicine
NRS grants target rosacea’s underlying mechanisms
MDedge Family Medicine
Current alopecia areata options include old and new therapies
MDedge Family Medicine
Pooled safety data analysis of tralokinumab reported
MDedge Family Medicine
Study eyes sunscreens marketed to individuals with skin of color
MDedge Family Medicine
Subset of patients with melanoma have very low mortality risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Parental atopic dermatitis, asthma linked to risk of AD in offspring
MDedge Family Medicine
Researchers use AI to diagnose infantile hemangioma
MDedge Family Medicine
A worsening abdominal rash
MDedge Family Medicine