Conference Coverage

Topical allantoin cream speeds wound healing in epidermolysis bullosa


 

AT AAD 16

References

Scioderm has started a phase III double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial evaluating the 6% concentration, which is being conducted in the United States and Europe and is still recruiting participants. Endpoints are similar to the phase IIb study.

Although not a disease modifying agent, allantoin 6% cream is the biggest treatment advance so far for these patients, Dr. Paller commented. “There is lots of research going on,” including stem cell therapy leading to fibroblast differentiation, grafting cultured keratinocytes onto skin, and intravenous collagen, she said.

But these approaches are in the early stages of research, she added, “and so far we either don’t know their effect or [if] they offer minimal assistance. The concept of using something that has virtually no risk, even if it simply helps make someone more comfortable with less itching and pain, or which starts to enable some healing, is really important to a child with one of these devastating disorders.”

Dr. Paller is also excited about the possibility that starting the treatment earlier, or continuing for a longer time, could even have a better result. While she cautioned that this is a “very small study of patients with mixed EB types,” she said, “still, it’s the best thing we have ever seen with anything topically.”

Dr. Paller is a consultant for Scioderm, which is developing Zorblisa and sponsoring the studies. Northwestern was one of the study sites for the phase IIb study.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

Ebola’s effects linger long after disease abates
MDedge Internal Medicine
High gluten consumption early in life upped risk of celiac disease
MDedge Internal Medicine
Brazilian study identifies fetal abnormalities linked to Zika virus
MDedge Internal Medicine
EHR Report: How Zika virus reveals the fault in our EHRs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Dr. Califf Is Confirmed as FDA Commissioner; NORD Issues Statement
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA Offers New Resource on Biosimilars for Health Care Providers
MDedge Internal Medicine
IOM Report: Mitochondrial Replacement “Ethically Permissible”
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA Offers New Resource on Biosimilars for Health Care Providers (copy 1)
MDedge Internal Medicine
Lupus patients’ transition to adult care leaves gaps, delays in care
MDedge Internal Medicine
Early estrogen likely prevents bone fractures in Turner syndrome
MDedge Internal Medicine