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Comparative and non-comparative studies of the efficacy and tolerance of tioconazole cream 1% versus another imidazole and/or placebo in neonates and infants with candidal diaper rash and/or impetigo.
J Int Med Res. 1987 Jan-Feb; 15(1):23-31.JI

Abstract

Eleven open multicentre studies were conducted to evaluate the efficacy of tioconazole cream 1% as a treatment for diaper rash with or without fungal (Candida) involvement, or impetigo in neonates and infants. In the dermal candidiasis/diaper rash group, 320 patients had either tioconazole (n = 220), a comparative imidazole (n = 43), or vehicle cream (n = 57) applied to the affected area twice daily. Twenty-one impetigo patients had only tioconazole cream 1% applied three times daily to lesions. The overall cure rate (patients with both clinical and mycological cure) at the end of treatment for tioconazole treated patients was 78%, for the comparative imidazole group it was 76% and for vehicle cream it was 39%. At the long-term follow-up evaluation approximately 6 weeks after treatment for patients with diaper rash, the overall cure rate was about the same in both tioconazole- and comparative imidazole-treated patients (87% and 90%, respectively), and 14% in patients using vehicle cream. Side-effects were coincident with disease symptoms and consisted primarily of erythema localized to the treatment area; they occurred in 5.4% (13/241) of the patients who received tioconazole and in 21% (9/43) of the patients who received comparative imidazole (econazole or miconazole). No side-effects were reported in this open study for the 57 patients who used vehicle cream. The results of these studies show that tioconazole cream 1% is safe and effective for the treatment of neonates and infants with dermal candidiasis, diaper rash and impetigo.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Clinical Trial
Comparative Study
Controlled Clinical Trial
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

3817280

Citation

Gibbs, D L., et al. "Comparative and Non-comparative Studies of the Efficacy and Tolerance of Tioconazole Cream 1% Versus Another Imidazole And/or Placebo in Neonates and Infants With Candidal Diaper Rash And/or Impetigo." The Journal of International Medical Research, vol. 15, no. 1, 1987, pp. 23-31.
Gibbs DL, Kashin P, Jevons S. Comparative and non-comparative studies of the efficacy and tolerance of tioconazole cream 1% versus another imidazole and/or placebo in neonates and infants with candidal diaper rash and/or impetigo. J Int Med Res. 1987;15(1):23-31.
Gibbs, D. L., Kashin, P., & Jevons, S. (1987). Comparative and non-comparative studies of the efficacy and tolerance of tioconazole cream 1% versus another imidazole and/or placebo in neonates and infants with candidal diaper rash and/or impetigo. The Journal of International Medical Research, 15(1), 23-31.
Gibbs DL, Kashin P, Jevons S. Comparative and Non-comparative Studies of the Efficacy and Tolerance of Tioconazole Cream 1% Versus Another Imidazole And/or Placebo in Neonates and Infants With Candidal Diaper Rash And/or Impetigo. J Int Med Res. 1987 Jan-Feb;15(1):23-31. PubMed PMID: 3817280.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Comparative and non-comparative studies of the efficacy and tolerance of tioconazole cream 1% versus another imidazole and/or placebo in neonates and infants with candidal diaper rash and/or impetigo. AU - Gibbs,D L, AU - Kashin,P, AU - Jevons,S, PY - 1987/1/1/pubmed PY - 1987/1/1/medline PY - 1987/1/1/entrez SP - 23 EP - 31 JF - The Journal of international medical research JO - J Int Med Res VL - 15 IS - 1 N2 - Eleven open multicentre studies were conducted to evaluate the efficacy of tioconazole cream 1% as a treatment for diaper rash with or without fungal (Candida) involvement, or impetigo in neonates and infants. In the dermal candidiasis/diaper rash group, 320 patients had either tioconazole (n = 220), a comparative imidazole (n = 43), or vehicle cream (n = 57) applied to the affected area twice daily. Twenty-one impetigo patients had only tioconazole cream 1% applied three times daily to lesions. The overall cure rate (patients with both clinical and mycological cure) at the end of treatment for tioconazole treated patients was 78%, for the comparative imidazole group it was 76% and for vehicle cream it was 39%. At the long-term follow-up evaluation approximately 6 weeks after treatment for patients with diaper rash, the overall cure rate was about the same in both tioconazole- and comparative imidazole-treated patients (87% and 90%, respectively), and 14% in patients using vehicle cream. Side-effects were coincident with disease symptoms and consisted primarily of erythema localized to the treatment area; they occurred in 5.4% (13/241) of the patients who received tioconazole and in 21% (9/43) of the patients who received comparative imidazole (econazole or miconazole). No side-effects were reported in this open study for the 57 patients who used vehicle cream. The results of these studies show that tioconazole cream 1% is safe and effective for the treatment of neonates and infants with dermal candidiasis, diaper rash and impetigo. SN - 0300-0605 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/3817280/Comparative_and_non_comparative_studies_of_the_efficacy_and_tolerance_of_tioconazole_cream_1_versus_another_imidazole_and/or_placebo_in_neonates_and_infants_with_candidal_diaper_rash_and/or_impetigo_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -