Antiandrogen therapy with spironolactone for the treatment of hidradenitis suppurativa.

Golbari NM, Porter ML, Kimball AB. Antiandrogen therapy with spironolactone for the treatment of hidradenitis suppurativa.. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 2019;80(1):114-119.
See also: HS Publications

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hormonal therapy is a potential treatment for hidradenitis suppurativa (HS). However, few data exist describing the efficacy of spironolactone in treatment of HS.

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether spironolactone treatment improves HS disease severity and patient-reported pain.

METHODS: We performed a single-center chart review of female patients with HS who were treated with spironolactone between 2000 and 2017. Primary outcome measurements included the HS Physician's Global Assessment (HS-PGA), Hurley staging, inflammatory lesion count, fistula count, and a numeric rating scale for pain.

RESULTS: On average, subjects were exposed to 75 mg of spironolactone daily over a 7.1-month follow-up period. Patients achieved significant disease improvement with regard to pain (Δ-1.5 [P = .01]), inflammatory lesions (Δ-1.3 [P = .02]), and HS-PGA score (Δ-0.6 [P < .001]). As expected, no change was found for Hurley stage (Δ0 [P = .32]) or fistulas (Δ0 [P = .73]). There was no difference in improvement between subjects who received less than 75 mg of spironolactone daily (n = 25; average dose, 45 mg/d) and those who received more than 100 mg daily (n = 21; average dose, 112 mg/d).

LIMITATIONS: Retrospective nature, limited sample size, and variations in severity measures documented were limiting factors.

CONCLUSIONS: Management of HS with spironolactone reduces lesion count, HS-PGA score, and pain. Lower doses appear to be effective and may be an appropriate option for patients with tolerability concerns.

Last updated on 07/11/2024
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