口服大麻二酚治疗帕金森病患者的脂溢性皮炎:随机临床试验。

Q3 Medicine JMIR dermatology Pub Date : 2024-03-11 DOI:10.2196/49965
Isaac Weber, Caterina Zagona-Prizio, Torunn E Sivesind, Madeline Adelman, Mindy D Szeto, Ying Liu, Stefan H Sillau, Jacquelyn Bainbridge, Jost Klawitter, Cristina Sempio, Cory A Dunnick, Maureen A Leehey, Robert P Dellavalle
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:脂溢性皮炎(SD)影响着18.6%-59%的帕金森病(PD)患者,最近的研究提供了证据,证明口服大麻二酚(CBD)疗法除了能改善帕金森病患者的运动和精神症状外,还能减少皮脂分泌。因此,口服大麻二酚可能有助于改善这两种常见并发症的症状:本研究调查了口服 CBD 治疗是否会降低帕金森病的 SD 严重程度:作为随机(CBD 与安慰剂的比例为 1:1)、平行、双盲、安慰剂对照试验的一部分,收集了面部照片,以评估每天每公斤口服 2.5 毫克富含 CBD 的大麻提取物(CBD 含量为 100 毫克/毫升,THC 含量为 3.3 毫克/毫升)的短期芝麻溶液对减轻帕金森病运动症状的疗效。参与者每天早上服用每公斤 1.25 毫克,持续 4 ± 1 天,然后每天服用两次,持续 10 ± 4 天。审查人员独立分析照片,并根据脂溢性皮炎面积和严重程度指数(SEDASI)量表进行严重程度排序。基线人口统计学特征和疾病特征以及治疗后 SEDASI 平均值和 SD 存在情况均通过双尾 t 检验和 Pearson χ2 检验进行分析。SEDASI 采用纵向回归分析,SD 采用广义估计方程分析:共有 27 人接受了安慰剂治疗,26 人接受了为期 16 天的 CBD 治疗。两组基线SD严重程度均较低,且无治疗效果。CBD治疗后与治疗前的风险比为0.69(95% CI 0.41-1.18;P=.15),而安慰剂治疗后的风险比为1.20(95% CI 0.88-1.65;P=.26)。两组的组内前后变化均无统计学意义,但两组之间存在差异(P=.07),因为CBD组估计病情有所改善,而安慰剂组估计病情有所恶化:本研究并未提供确凿证据,证明口服 CBD 可减少帕金森病患者 SD 的出现。虽然这项研究有足够的力量来检测主要结果(CBD对帕金森病运动症状的疗效),但在检测SD的存在和严重程度变化的次要结果方面力量不足。CBD可通过多种机制对SD发病机制产生有益影响。更大规模的研究,包括疾病严重程度增加和治疗时间延长的参与者,可能会更好地阐明治疗效果,因此需要确定CBD对影响SD严重程度的真正疗效:试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03582137;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03582137。
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Oral Cannabidiol for Seborrheic Dermatitis in Patients With Parkinson Disease: Randomized Clinical Trial.

Background: Seborrheic dermatitis (SD) affects 18.6%-59% of persons with Parkinson disease (PD), and recent studies provide evidence that oral cannabidiol (CBD) therapy could reduce sebum production in addition to improving motor and psychiatric symptoms in PD. Therefore, oral CBD could be useful for improving symptoms of both commonly co-occurring conditions.

Objective: This study investigates whether oral CBD therapy is associated with a decrease in SD severity in PD.

Methods: Facial photographs were collected as a component of a randomized (1:1 CBD vs placebo), parallel, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial assessing the efficacy of a short-term 2.5 mg per kg per day oral sesame solution CBD-rich cannabis extract (formulated to 100 mg/mL CBD and 3.3 mg/mL THC) for reducing motor symptoms in PD. Participants took 1.25 mg per kg per day each morning for 4 ±1 days and then twice daily for 10 ±4 days. Reviewers analyzed the photographs independently and provided a severity ranking based on the Seborrheic Dermatitis Area and Severity Index (SEDASI) scale. Baseline demographic and disease characteristics, as well as posttreatment SEDASI averages and the presence of SD, were analyzed with 2-tailed t tests and Pearson χ2 tests. SEDASI was analyzed with longitudinal regression, and SD was analyzed with generalized estimating equations.

Results: A total of 27 participants received a placebo and 26 received CBD for 16 days. SD severity was low in both groups at baseline, and there was no treatment effect. The risk ratio for patients receiving CBD, post versus pre, was 0.69 (95% CI 0.41-1.18; P=.15), compared to 1.20 (95% CI 0.88-1.65; P=.26) for the patients receiving the placebo. The within-group pre-post change was not statistically significant for either group, but they differed from each other (P=.07) because there was an estimated improvement for the CBD group and an estimated worsening for the placebo group.

Conclusions: This study does not provide solid evidence that oral CBD therapy reduces the presence of SD among patients with PD. While this study was sufficiently powered to detect the primary outcome (efficacy of CBD on PD motor symptoms), it was underpowered for the secondary outcomes of detecting changes in the presence and severity of SD. Multiple mechanisms exist through which CBD can exert beneficial effects on SD pathogenesis. Larger studies, including participants with increased disease severity and longer treatment periods, may better elucidate treatment effects and are needed to determine CBD's true efficacy for affecting SD severity.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03582137; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03582137.

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