An Open-Label, Prospective, Pilot Study of Hypertonic Saline for Hidradenitis Suppurativa.

Porter ML, Salian P, Santillan MR, Greif C, Kimball AB. An Open-Label, Prospective, Pilot Study of Hypertonic Saline for Hidradenitis Suppurativa.. Dermatologic surgery : official publication for American Society for Dermatologic Surgery [et al.]. 2022;48(9):954-960.
See also: HS Publications

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) fistulas are likely to persist without surgical intervention. Hypertonic saline (HTS), a venous sclerosant, disrupts the endothelial lining leading to occlusion and fibrosis when used for venous insufficiency.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of HTS sclerotherapy for HS fistulas.

METHODS AND MATERIALS: This Institutional review board-approved, nonrandomized, clinical trial included adult patients with a diagnosis of HS and at least one confirmed HS fistula who underwent HTS injections into their fistulas every two weeks followed by a 4-week follow-up period. The study was performed from 2016 to 2019 at two academic outpatient dermatology clinics in Boston, MA. Primary outcomes were physician-assessed improvement of HS fistula characteristics between final and baseline visits and physician-assessed HS improvement during course of study.

RESULTS: Overall, 21 patients participated. Physician-assessed overall HS improvement was significant between Visits 2 and 3 (p = .036). Drainage (p = .035), erythema (p = .008), and swelling (p = .025) demonstrated statistically significant improvement from baseline to final visit. Dermatology life quality index scores significantly improved from baseline to Visit 2 (p = .0005), Visit 3 (p = .0008), and final visit (p = .011). Numeric rating scale stinging scores increased with sclerosant volume.

CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated physician-reported and patient-reported improvement in fistulas following serial HTS injections. HTS injections were well tolerated.

Last updated on 07/11/2024
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