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J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. · Dec 2013
ReviewAssessment of clinical signs of atopic dermatitis: a systematic review and recommendation.
- Jochen Schmitt, Sinéad Langan, Stefanie Deckert, Ake Svensson, Laura von Kobyletzki, Kim Thomas, Phyllis Spuls, and Harmonising Outcome Measures for Atopic Dermatitis (HOME) Initiative.
- Centre for Evidence-based Healthcare, University Hospital Dresden, Dresden, Germany; Institute and Policlinic of Occupational and Social Medicine, Technical University Dresden, Dresden, Germany. Electronic address: jochen.schmitt@uniklinikum-dresden.de.
- J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 2013 Dec 1; 132 (6): 1337-47.
BackgroundClinical signs are a core outcome domain for atopic dermatitis (AD) trials. The current lack of standardization of outcome measures in AD trials hampers evidence-based communication.ObjectiveWe sought to provide evidence-based recommendations for the measurement of clinical signs in AD trials and to inform the Harmonising Outcome Measures for Atopic Dermatitis Initiative.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review on measurement properties of outcome measurements for clinical signs of AD. We systematically searched MEDLINE and Embase (until October 1, 2012) for validation studies on instruments measuring the clinical signs of AD. Grading of the truth, discrimination, and feasibility of scales; methodological study quality; and recommendations were based on predefined criteria.ResultsSixteen eligible instruments were identified, of which 2 were best validated. The Eczema Area and Severity Index has adequate validity, responsiveness, internal consistency, intraobserver reliability, and intermediate interobserver reliability but unclear interpretability and feasibility. The Severity Scoring of Atopic Dermatitis Index (SCORAD) has adequate validity, responsiveness, interobserver reliability, and interpretability and unclear intraobserver reliability. Only the objective SCORAD (ie, the clinical signs domain of the SCORAD) is internally consistent. The Six Area, Six Sign Atopic Dermatitis Index severity score and Three Item Severity Score fulfill some quality criteria, but the performance in other required measurement properties is unclear. The Patient-oriented Eczema Measure is reliable and responsive but has inadequate content validity to assess clinical signs of AD. The remaining 11 scales have either (almost) not been validated or performed inadequately.ConclusionsThe Eczema Area and Severity Index and SCORAD are the best instruments to assess the clinical signs of AD. The other 14 instruments identified are (currently) not recommended because of unclear or inadequate measurement properties.Copyright © 2013 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
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