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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2007 Aug;96(8):1233-7.
doi: 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2007.00363.x. Epub 2007 Jun 21.

Short-term growth in children with eczema during treatment with topical mometasone furoate and tacrolimus

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Short-term growth in children with eczema during treatment with topical mometasone furoate and tacrolimus

Josefine Gradman et al. Acta Paediatr. 2007 Aug.

Abstract

Background: Treatment with topical glucocorticoids in children with atopic eczema may be associated with systemic adverse effects, such as suppression of growth.

Aim: To asses if treatment with topical mometasone furoate 0.1% or topical tacrolimus 0.1% affects short-term growth in children with atopic eczema. Primary outcome measures were lower leg growth rates measured by knemometry.

Methods: Twenty 5- to 12-year-old prepubertal children with atopic eczema were included in a randomised, investigator-blind crossover study with five periods: two treatment periods, a run in, a wash out and a run out. All periods were of 2-week duration. The subjects applied mometasone furoate ointment 0.1% once daily during one treatment period and tacrolimus ointment 0.1% twice daily during the other treatment period.

Results: As compared to run in mean lower leg growth rate during mometasone furoate and tacrolimus treatment was reduced by 0.09 and 0.06 mm/week, respectively, (F = 1.12, p = 0.35). Consistently, no statistically significant effects on urine levels of eosinophil protein X and crossed-linked N-telopeptides were detected.

Conclusion: Treatment with mometasone furoate or tacrolimus does not affect short-term growth in children with mild to moderate atopic eczema.

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