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Title

A double-blind, randomized controlled trial to compare the effectiveness and safety of purified protein derivative of tuberculin antigen with vaccine in the treatment of multiple viral warts.

Authors

Chandra, Somodyuti; Sil, Amrita; Datta, Adrija; Pal, Santasmita; Das, Nilay Kanti

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Present day therapeutic modalities for viral warts are mostly ablative in nature, limited by high recurrence rates and are unsuitable for numerous lesions. Immunotherapy has the potential to overcome these limitations.<bold>Aims: </bold>This study aimed at comparing efficacy and safety of and quality of life changes with intradermal purified protein derivative (PPD) of tuberculin antigen and Mycobacterium w (Mw) vaccine in immunotherapy of warts.<bold>Methods: </bold>Patients with multiple (≥5) warts were randomized (1:1) into two groups (PPDand, Mw vaccine groups). Fortnightly, 0.1 ml of either medicine was injected intradermally over the deltoidregion till complete resolution or a maximum of six doses. Patients were followed-up for another 3 months for recurrence.<bold>Results: </bold>Sixty-four participants received either PPD or Mw vaccine. The number of warts were comparable at baseline (P = 0.089, Mann-Whitney test), and reduced significantly with treatment in both groups (P < 0.001, Friedman's ANOVA), as seen from the fourth follow-up onwards with Mw and fifth follow-up onwards with PPD (P < 0.05, Post hoc Dunn's test). Intergroup comparison showed significantly more (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney test) reduction with Mw than PPD at the sixth and seventh follow-up. The size of warts also reduced significantly (P < 0.001) in both groups from the third follow-up onwards. Complete remission was more (P = 0.539, Fischer's exact test) in the Mw group (68.8%) than the PPD group (50%); and was significantly higher (P = 0.049, Mann-Whitney test) in patients having shorter duration of warts. Adverse events were significantly more (P < 0.001) with Mw including ulceration (50%), discharge (15.6%), pain-swelling-induration and scar at the injection site (97% each), whereas some of those receiving PPD noted erythema and scaling at the injection site (18.8%), and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (12.5%). No recurrence was seen till the end of the study.<bold>Limitation: </bold>Unicentric trial.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Intradermal injection of Mw vaccine was more effective but had a higher incidence of adverse effects compared to PPD of tuberculin antigen in patients with warts.

Subjects

WARTS; THERAPEUTICS; TUBERCULIN; MYCOBACTERIUM; CARBON dioxide lasers; INTRADERMAL injections; VACCINES; IMPACT of Event Scale; WARTS treatment; BACTERIAL antigens; BACTERIAL vaccines; ERYTHEMA; LONGITUDINAL method; PAIN; STATISTICAL sampling; DISEASE relapse; RANDOMIZED controlled trials; DISEASE remission; BLIND experiment; HYPERPIGMENTATION; SKIN ulcers

Publication

Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology & Leprology, 2019, Vol 85, Issue 4, p355

ISSN

0378-6323

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.4103/ijdvl.IJDVL_549_18

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