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Silk garments plus standard care compared with standard care for treating eczema in children: a randomised, controlled, observer-blind, pragmatic trial (CLOTHES Trial)

Silk garments plus standard care compared with standard care for treating eczema in children: a randomised, controlled, observer-blind, pragmatic trial (CLOTHES Trial)
Silk garments plus standard care compared with standard care for treating eczema in children: a randomised, controlled, observer-blind, pragmatic trial (CLOTHES Trial)

BACKGROUND: The role of clothing in the management of eczema (also called atopic dermatitis or atopic eczema) is poorly understood. This trial evaluated the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of silk garments (in addition to standard care) for the management of eczema in children with moderate to severe disease.

METHODS AND FINDINGS: This was a parallel-group, randomised, controlled, observer-blind trial. Children aged 1 to 15 y with moderate to severe eczema were recruited from secondary care and the community at five UK medical centres. Participants were allocated using online randomisation (1:1) to standard care or to standard care plus silk garments, stratified by age and recruiting centre. Silk garments were worn for 6 mo. Primary outcome (eczema severity) was assessed at baseline, 2, 4, and 6 mo, by nurses blinded to treatment allocation, using the Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI), which was log-transformed for analysis (intention-to-treat analysis). A safety outcome was number of skin infections. Three hundred children were randomised (26 November 2013 to 5 May 2015): 42% girls, 79% white, mean age 5 y. Primary analysis included 282/300 (94%) children (n = 141 in each group). The garments were worn more often at night than in the day (median of 81% of nights [25th to 75th centile 57% to 96%] and 34% of days [25th to 75th centile 10% to 76%]). Geometric mean EASI scores at baseline, 2, 4, and 6 mo were, respectively, 9.2, 6.4, 5.8, and 5.4 for silk clothing and 8.4, 6.6, 6.0, and 5.4 for standard care. There was no evidence of any difference between the groups in EASI score averaged over all follow-up visits adjusted for baseline EASI score, age, and centre: adjusted ratio of geometric means 0.95, 95% CI 0.85 to 1.07, (p = 0.43). This confidence interval is equivalent to a difference of -1.5 to 0.5 in the original EASI units, which is not clinically important. Skin infections occurred in 36/142 (25%) and 39/141 (28%) of children in the silk clothing and standard care groups, respectively. Even if the small observed treatment effect was genuine, the incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year was £56,811 in the base case analysis from a National Health Service perspective, suggesting that silk garments are unlikely to be cost-effective using currently accepted thresholds. The main limitation of the study is that use of an objective primary outcome, whilst minimising detection bias, may have underestimated treatment effects.

CONCLUSIONS: Silk clothing is unlikely to provide additional benefit over standard care in children with moderate to severe eczema.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN77261365.

Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Clothing, Eczema/pathology, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Severity of Illness Index, Silk, Single-Blind Method, Standard of Care, Treatment Outcome
1549-1277
Thomas, Kim S
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Bradshaw, Lucy E
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Sach, Tracey H.
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Batchelor, Jonathan M
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Lawton, Sandra
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Harrison, Eleanor F
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Haines, Rachel H
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Ahmed, Amina
b193d9a0-c848-4901-9103-d09bd9d651d5
Williams, Hywel C
3914e691-2348-4704-a044-e8d2af92444e
Dean, Taraneh
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Burrows, Nigel P
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Pollock, Ian
381fd241-3ec1-4566-946a-3dc6ad3ff915
Llewellyn, Joanne
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Crang, Clare
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Grundy, Jane D
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Guiness, Juliet
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Gribbin, Andrew
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Mitchell, Eleanor J
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Cowdell, Fiona
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Brown, Sara J
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Montgomery, Alan A
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UK Dermatology Clinical Trials Network’s CLOTHES Trial Team
Thomas, Kim S
75e143ff-868e-47dc-b892-c9745a7e496a
Bradshaw, Lucy E
4efb4747-f146-4816-b06e-982bf895c6a3
Sach, Tracey H.
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Batchelor, Jonathan M
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Lawton, Sandra
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Harrison, Eleanor F
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Haines, Rachel H
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Ahmed, Amina
b193d9a0-c848-4901-9103-d09bd9d651d5
Williams, Hywel C
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Dean, Taraneh
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Burrows, Nigel P
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Pollock, Ian
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Llewellyn, Joanne
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Crang, Clare
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Grundy, Jane D
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Guiness, Juliet
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Gribbin, Andrew
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Mitchell, Eleanor J
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Cowdell, Fiona
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Brown, Sara J
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Montgomery, Alan A
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UK Dermatology Clinical Trials Network’s CLOTHES Trial Team (2017) Silk garments plus standard care compared with standard care for treating eczema in children: a randomised, controlled, observer-blind, pragmatic trial (CLOTHES Trial). PLoS Medicine, 14 (4), [e1002280]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1002280).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The role of clothing in the management of eczema (also called atopic dermatitis or atopic eczema) is poorly understood. This trial evaluated the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of silk garments (in addition to standard care) for the management of eczema in children with moderate to severe disease.

METHODS AND FINDINGS: This was a parallel-group, randomised, controlled, observer-blind trial. Children aged 1 to 15 y with moderate to severe eczema were recruited from secondary care and the community at five UK medical centres. Participants were allocated using online randomisation (1:1) to standard care or to standard care plus silk garments, stratified by age and recruiting centre. Silk garments were worn for 6 mo. Primary outcome (eczema severity) was assessed at baseline, 2, 4, and 6 mo, by nurses blinded to treatment allocation, using the Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI), which was log-transformed for analysis (intention-to-treat analysis). A safety outcome was number of skin infections. Three hundred children were randomised (26 November 2013 to 5 May 2015): 42% girls, 79% white, mean age 5 y. Primary analysis included 282/300 (94%) children (n = 141 in each group). The garments were worn more often at night than in the day (median of 81% of nights [25th to 75th centile 57% to 96%] and 34% of days [25th to 75th centile 10% to 76%]). Geometric mean EASI scores at baseline, 2, 4, and 6 mo were, respectively, 9.2, 6.4, 5.8, and 5.4 for silk clothing and 8.4, 6.6, 6.0, and 5.4 for standard care. There was no evidence of any difference between the groups in EASI score averaged over all follow-up visits adjusted for baseline EASI score, age, and centre: adjusted ratio of geometric means 0.95, 95% CI 0.85 to 1.07, (p = 0.43). This confidence interval is equivalent to a difference of -1.5 to 0.5 in the original EASI units, which is not clinically important. Skin infections occurred in 36/142 (25%) and 39/141 (28%) of children in the silk clothing and standard care groups, respectively. Even if the small observed treatment effect was genuine, the incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year was £56,811 in the base case analysis from a National Health Service perspective, suggesting that silk garments are unlikely to be cost-effective using currently accepted thresholds. The main limitation of the study is that use of an objective primary outcome, whilst minimising detection bias, may have underestimated treatment effects.

CONCLUSIONS: Silk clothing is unlikely to provide additional benefit over standard care in children with moderate to severe eczema.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN77261365.

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More information

Published date: 11 April 2017
Keywords: Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Clothing, Eczema/pathology, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Severity of Illness Index, Silk, Single-Blind Method, Standard of Care, Treatment Outcome

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480866
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480866
ISSN: 1549-1277
PURE UUID: 7d297e64-73ee-4b90-b4e3-82d0c5b7503a
ORCID for Tracey H. Sach: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8098-9220

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 10 Aug 2023 16:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Kim S Thomas
Author: Lucy E Bradshaw
Author: Tracey H. Sach ORCID iD
Author: Jonathan M Batchelor
Author: Sandra Lawton
Author: Eleanor F Harrison
Author: Rachel H Haines
Author: Amina Ahmed
Author: Hywel C Williams
Author: Taraneh Dean
Author: Nigel P Burrows
Author: Ian Pollock
Author: Joanne Llewellyn
Author: Clare Crang
Author: Jane D Grundy
Author: Juliet Guiness
Author: Andrew Gribbin
Author: Eleanor J Mitchell
Author: Fiona Cowdell
Author: Sara J Brown
Author: Alan A Montgomery
Corporate Author: UK Dermatology Clinical Trials Network’s CLOTHES Trial Team

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