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Clinical Trial
. 2007;18(6):335-40.
doi: 10.1080/09546630701386993.

Thalidomide: an experience in therapeutic outcome and adverse reactions

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Free article
Clinical Trial

Thalidomide: an experience in therapeutic outcome and adverse reactions

Nand L Sharma et al. J Dermatolog Treat. 2007.
Free article

Abstract

Background: The US FDA-approved thalidomide for the treatment of chronic recurrent/severe erythema nodosum leprosum. Thalidomide is also useful in many other inflammatory dermatological conditions where patients have exhausted other treatment options.

Methods: The beneficial and adverse clinical effects of thalidomide were studied in 25 patients suffering from different inflammatory dermatological conditions that were poorly controlled with conventional therapies.

Results: Thalidomide was found to be effective in various inflammatory dermatological diseases other than chronic recurrent erythema nodosum leprosum such as Behçet's disease, disseminated and hypertrophic discoid lupus erythematosus, erosive lichen planus, discoid lupus erythematosus-lichen planus overlap, recurrent aphthous stomatitis and prurigo nodularis. Deep vein thrombosis due to thalidomide occurred in 20% of these patients and appears to be a significant side effect.

Conclusion: Thalidomide appears promising in a number of inflammatory dermatological conditions and will probably find new usages in future. The treating physicians need to be wary of the thrombo-embolic complications due to thalidomide especially when glucocorticoids or other chemotherapeutic agents such as doxorubicin, gemcitabine, 5-fluorouracil or dexamethasone-cyclophosphamide pulse therapy are being used concomitantly, and in patients of metastatic renal carcinoma, myelodysplastic syndrome or multiple myeloma receiving thalidomide/chemotherapy. Antiphospholipid or anticardiolipin antibodies appear to be other possible risk factors for this complication.

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