1 / 24

Tinea Pedis Natural History & Clinical Trials

Tinea Pedis Natural History & Clinical Trials. Joseph Porres, M.D., Ph.D. Medical Officer, DDDDP. Part I: Natural History. Tinea pedis subtypes Causative organisms Dermatomycosis syndrome Predisposing factors Complicating factors & Complications Epidemiology & recurrence Diagnosis

thane
Download Presentation

Tinea Pedis Natural History & Clinical Trials

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tinea PedisNatural History&Clinical Trials Joseph Porres, M.D., Ph.D. Medical Officer, DDDDP

  2. Part I: Natural History • Tinea pedis subtypes • Causative organisms • Dermatomycosis syndrome • Predisposing factors • Complicating factors & Complications • Epidemiology & recurrence • Diagnosis • Treatment

  3. Tinea Pedis Subtypes • Interdigital: pruritus, erythema, scaling, fissuring, maceration • Plantar: • Moccasin: scaling, pruritus, erythema • Vesicobullous: pruritus, vesicles, scaling, erythema • Combinations of interdigital and plantar • Athlete’s foot is the layman’s term and can be found in reference to any of these forms

  4. Causative Organisms • Trichophyton rubrum (60-80%) • Plantar, mocassin • Plantar small vesicles, may also affect distal subungual nail, other body sites • Trichophyton mentagrophytes (10-20%), • Peri-plantar large vesicles, and may spread to white superficial nail • Epidermophyton floccosum (3-10%)

  5. Tinea Pedis Interdigitalis Dermatlas, JHMI.EDU

  6. Tinea Pedis Plantaris Rebell, G. & Zaias, N. Cutis 2001, 67, 5S, 6-17

  7. Tinea Pedis Plantaris, Vesicular Dermatlas, JHMI.EDU

  8. Tinea Pedis Plantaris, Moccasin Rebell, G. & Zaias, N. Cutis 2001, 67, 5S, 6-17

  9. Rebell, G. & Zaias, N. Cutis 2001, 67, 5S, 6-17

  10. Predisposing Factors • Closed communities: army barracks, boarding schools • Public baths, swimming pools • Local trauma on dermatophyte carrying individual • Occlusive footgear • Immersion • Warm weather • Exposure to hair of infected animals (rats in Vietnam) • Infected family members (~17% in one study) • Familial predisposition

  11. Complicating Factors: • Immunosuppression • Atopy • Diabetes • Compromised circulation • Localized trauma • Geriatric population

  12. Complications: Cellulitis • Tinea pedis unrecognized • Treatment not given • Treatment is inadequate • Reinfection from the nail

  13. Epidemiology • 15-70 % of population at large • 40 % of patients attending a general clinic • Those seeking help often have nail involvement • Many undiagnosed cases • Dermatophytes isolated from: • 2-40% “normal feet” • Public showers • Swimming pools • Shoes and Socks

  14. Recurrence Topical terbinafine and clotrimazole in interdigital tinea pedis: A multicenter comparison of cure and relapse rates with 1- and 4- week treatment regimens. Bergstresser PR et al, JAAD 1993; 28: 648-51 Long-term outcome of patients with interdigital tinea pedis treated with terbinafine or clotrimazole. Elewski, B. et al. JAAD 1995; 32:290-2

  15. Study Details • 193 evaluable patients with interdigital tinea pedis • Treatment twice daily with: • terbinafine cr or clotrimazole cr • 1 or 4 weeks Observation for up to 18 months [Elewski] • Mycology “Cure”

  16. Study Results

  17. Diagnosis • Clinical: by clinical signs and symptoms • Mycology: KOH (direct examination) and culture. • Mycology [KOH] helps confirm diagnosis and avoid: • Delay of indicated treatment • Prescribing inappropriate treatment

  18. Treatment. Efficacy rates reported*: * Treatment of Skin Disease. Lebohl, M. et al, Mosby. 2003

  19. Part II: Clinical Trials • Dose ranging studies • Clinical trials for safety and efficacy

  20. Dose Ranging Studies For Tinea Pedis • Dose ranging studies for topical antifungals often recommended by FDA but usually not conducted • Dose ranging studies for topical antifungals to select the best safety/efficacy dose: • Drug strength • Frequency of application • Duration of treatment

  21. Clinical Safety and Efficacy Trials • Assessment • Outcomes

  22. Assessment • Mycology: • Direct microscopic examination (KOH) • Mycology culture • Clinical. Signs and symptoms: • Erythema • Scaling • Pruritus, etc.

  23. Outcomes • Mycology “Cure” (MC): • Negative KOH and negative culture • Effective treatment: • MC, no symptoms, only residual signs • Complete Cure: • MC, and no signs or symptoms

  24. Clinical Safety and Efficay Studies Inclusion/exclusion criteriaoften do not mimic the populations expected to actually use the product • Include: healthy patients with interdigital tinea pedis • Exclude harder cases: • Onychomycosis • Mocassin type, keratotic feet • Diabetic • Immunosuppressed • Compromised circulation

More Related