Guest guest Posted February 26, 2002 Report Share Posted February 26, 2002 Has anyone tried desloratadine yet? It's now available in the US as Clarinex. It's available in the EU as Aerius and/or Neoclarityn. Below is an article that Matija posted about it late last year. Hi, I found another article from the Nov. 2001 issue of Skin & Allergy News. Desloratadine sounds like an antihistamine which may be able to treat inflammatory, UV-induced skin conditions. Maybe some of our European posters can try this and report back to the group? This drug sounds like it's tailor-made for rosacea. Take care, Matija Under FDA review Europeans Enthusiastic About Desloratadine Bruce Jancin Denver Bureau MUNICH — Once-daily desloratadine is " an important therapeutic advance " in the management of chronic idiopathic urticaria, Dr. Rudiger Hein said at a satellite symposium held in conjunction with the 10th Congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology. The efficacy and side-effect profile of this potent new nonsedating antihistamine are such that Dr. Hein and other German physicians experienced with it agreed it has become their preferred option even in children, despite the lack of pediatric clinical trial data or a specific indication. Desloratadine has been available in Germany since February. Schering- Plough Corp. has filed for marketing approval with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as well as in the remaining European Union countries for the indications of chronic idiopathic urticaria and allergic rhinitis. Dr. a Kerscher, a dermatologist at the University of Hamburg, said this potent peripheral histamine-receptor blocker features roughly 50-fold greater histamine-1 inhibition than any other antihistamine, including loratadine (Claritin), fexofenadine (Allegra), and cetirizine (Zyrtec), as well as the older sedating antihistamines. In vitro studies suggest desloratadine's anti-inflammatory activity is in the same ballpark as that of dexamethasone. Moreover, Dr. Kerscher's UVB studies in 10 patients with polymorphic light eruption provided compelling clinical evidence of the drug's anti-inflammatory action, as patients' minimal erythema dose increased significantly after just one dose of desloratadine. Photosensitivity was even further reduced after 5 days of the drug at 5 mg/day, she said at the satellite symposium sponsored by Schering-Plough. On the strength of this effect, she has been utilizing desloratadine to treat patients—including children—with polymorphic light eruption and a variety of other inflammatory, pruritic skin diseases in addition to chronic idiopathic urticaria. " In Germany it's not allowed under law [to prescribe desloratadine in children], but we are doctors. And the high anti-inflammatory activity combined with the high antihistamine activity offers a new therapeutic possibility, even in children. Quality of life and quality of sleep improve. ... I do not use the old substances in children anymore, " she said. Dr. Hein concurred. He reported on a double-blind trial in which he and his colleagues randomly assigned 190 patients aged 12-79 years with flaring chronic idiopathic urticaria to 5 mg of desloratadine or placebo daily for 6 weeks. After a single dose, the desloratadine group showed significantly greater improvement in pruritus, number of wheals, sleep disturbance, and activities of daily living. These benefits were maintained throughout the 6-week study. No one in the desloratadine group dropped out due to treatment-related adverse events, and there were no clinically significant changes in QT interval or other ECG measurements, added Dr. Hein, professor of dermatology at Technical University, Munich. Session chair Dr. Klaus Bachert put in a plug for physicians to evaluate their patients with urticaria or atopic dermatitis for other allergic manifestations, especially allergic rhinitis and asthma. Current thinking holds that these are systemic diseases and that patients with manifestations in the skin are at increased risk for other-organ involvement. The World Health Organization recently labeled allergic rhinitis as a major chronic respiratory disease based on frequency, associated high medical costs, adverse impact upon school and work performance and quality of life, and the fact that allergic rhinitis is associated with at least a four- to five-fold increased risk of developing asthma, noted Dr. Bachert of the University of Ghent (Belgium). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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