Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic hyperkeratotic dermatitis of the palms and soles represents a severe multi‐etiological problem, too often faced with ineffective or tedious topical remedies.
METHODS: A single‐blind, matched‐sample design investigation was carried out of 42 patients with chronic hyperkeratotic palmoplantar dermatitis, who were administered acitretin 25–50 mg/day for 1 month, which was controlled versus a conventional topical treatment (betamethasone/salicylic acid ointment). Therapeutic improvement was expressed with the reduction of severity score (expressed on a 0–10 scale).
RESULTS: Acitretin was significantly better than the conventional treatment after 30 days (two sided p<0.0001). Moreover, improvement significantly persisted 5 months after suspension of acitretin (p<0.0001), while this was not the case after suspension of the control treatment (p=0.3019). Lesions improved more rapidly with acitretin than with the control treatment (p<0.0002). Some cases of loss of sensitization in patch‐test‐positive patients were observed. Side effects were minimal or absent, and patients expressed overtly their preference for acitretin treatment.
CONCLUSION: After evaluating the former literature, the risks and the benefits, as well as the overt superiority of retinoid treatment, the authors conclude that acitretin should be considered a first choice treatment for this fastidious condition.