Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis: A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis : A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials. / Grove, Gabriela L.; Henning, Mattias A.S.; Togsverd-Bo, Katrine; DiGiorgio, Catherine M.; Avram, Mathew M.; Haedersdal, Merete.

I: JEADV Clinical Practice, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Grove, GL, Henning, MAS, Togsverd-Bo, K, DiGiorgio, CM, Avram, MM & Haedersdal, M 2024, 'Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis: A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials', JEADV Clinical Practice. https://doi.org/10.1002/jvc2.415

APA

Grove, G. L., Henning, M. A. S., Togsverd-Bo, K., DiGiorgio, C. M., Avram, M. M., & Haedersdal, M. (2024). Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis: A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials. JEADV Clinical Practice. https://doi.org/10.1002/jvc2.415

Vancouver

Grove GL, Henning MAS, Togsverd-Bo K, DiGiorgio CM, Avram MM, Haedersdal M. Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis: A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials. JEADV Clinical Practice. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1002/jvc2.415

Author

Grove, Gabriela L. ; Henning, Mattias A.S. ; Togsverd-Bo, Katrine ; DiGiorgio, Catherine M. ; Avram, Mathew M. ; Haedersdal, Merete. / Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis : A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials. I: JEADV Clinical Practice. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{adce59cffce24a60a06c45d4cde4ac7f,
title = "Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis: A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials",
abstract = "Axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis are challenging to treat, and neither topical nor systemic drugs have provided optimal treatment outcomes. In the past decades, treatment with botulinum toxin (BTX) has gained status as the gold standard, but it has its limitations both in regard to duration as well as indication for osmidrosis, specifically. A variety of local interventions have been explored in both the surgical field and within energy-based devices (EBDs) for alternative in-office treatments, but a collective overview is lacking. This study sought to investigate and assess the evidence on and effect of current local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis. A systematic search for prospective and controlled clinical trials in the databases PubMed, Embase and Cochrane Library until 31 December 2023 was executed. Relevant literature was identified independently by two authors according to predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Fifty-nine studies met the criteria for final inclusion, of which 46 studies were randomized controlled trials and 13 were nonrandomized trials. The included studies were classified by procedure type. Individually, a total of 28 studies investigated BTXs, 11 studies explored EBDs, while six studies reported on surgical interventions. Additionally, 14 studies evaluated alternative procedures or investigated combinations and side-by-side comparisons of the different procedure types. The dominant evidence on efficacy and safety was of BTX A. EBDs are increasingly being investigated with microwave thermolysis appearing to be the singular most established and scientifically well-founded method. In the surgical field, less-invasive methods are gaining ground. To meet the increasing demand for individualized treatment, additional high-quality comparative studies are required for the establishment of a future variety of standard treatments.",
keywords = "botulinum toxin, bromhidrosis, energy-based device, hyperhidrosis, injectable, microwave thermolysis, osmidrosis, procedure, PROMs, QoL, surgery, systematic review",
author = "Grove, {Gabriela L.} and Henning, {Mattias A.S.} and Katrine Togsverd-Bo and DiGiorgio, {Catherine M.} and Avram, {Mathew M.} and Merete Haedersdal",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Authors. JEADV Clinical Practice published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1002/jvc2.415",
language = "English",
journal = "JEADV Clinical Practice",
issn = "2768-6566",
publisher = "Wiley Open Access",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis

T2 - A systematic review of prospective and controlled clinical trials

AU - Grove, Gabriela L.

AU - Henning, Mattias A.S.

AU - Togsverd-Bo, Katrine

AU - DiGiorgio, Catherine M.

AU - Avram, Mathew M.

AU - Haedersdal, Merete

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors. JEADV Clinical Practice published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis are challenging to treat, and neither topical nor systemic drugs have provided optimal treatment outcomes. In the past decades, treatment with botulinum toxin (BTX) has gained status as the gold standard, but it has its limitations both in regard to duration as well as indication for osmidrosis, specifically. A variety of local interventions have been explored in both the surgical field and within energy-based devices (EBDs) for alternative in-office treatments, but a collective overview is lacking. This study sought to investigate and assess the evidence on and effect of current local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis. A systematic search for prospective and controlled clinical trials in the databases PubMed, Embase and Cochrane Library until 31 December 2023 was executed. Relevant literature was identified independently by two authors according to predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Fifty-nine studies met the criteria for final inclusion, of which 46 studies were randomized controlled trials and 13 were nonrandomized trials. The included studies were classified by procedure type. Individually, a total of 28 studies investigated BTXs, 11 studies explored EBDs, while six studies reported on surgical interventions. Additionally, 14 studies evaluated alternative procedures or investigated combinations and side-by-side comparisons of the different procedure types. The dominant evidence on efficacy and safety was of BTX A. EBDs are increasingly being investigated with microwave thermolysis appearing to be the singular most established and scientifically well-founded method. In the surgical field, less-invasive methods are gaining ground. To meet the increasing demand for individualized treatment, additional high-quality comparative studies are required for the establishment of a future variety of standard treatments.

AB - Axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis are challenging to treat, and neither topical nor systemic drugs have provided optimal treatment outcomes. In the past decades, treatment with botulinum toxin (BTX) has gained status as the gold standard, but it has its limitations both in regard to duration as well as indication for osmidrosis, specifically. A variety of local interventions have been explored in both the surgical field and within energy-based devices (EBDs) for alternative in-office treatments, but a collective overview is lacking. This study sought to investigate and assess the evidence on and effect of current local procedures for axillary hyperhidrosis and osmidrosis. A systematic search for prospective and controlled clinical trials in the databases PubMed, Embase and Cochrane Library until 31 December 2023 was executed. Relevant literature was identified independently by two authors according to predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Fifty-nine studies met the criteria for final inclusion, of which 46 studies were randomized controlled trials and 13 were nonrandomized trials. The included studies were classified by procedure type. Individually, a total of 28 studies investigated BTXs, 11 studies explored EBDs, while six studies reported on surgical interventions. Additionally, 14 studies evaluated alternative procedures or investigated combinations and side-by-side comparisons of the different procedure types. The dominant evidence on efficacy and safety was of BTX A. EBDs are increasingly being investigated with microwave thermolysis appearing to be the singular most established and scientifically well-founded method. In the surgical field, less-invasive methods are gaining ground. To meet the increasing demand for individualized treatment, additional high-quality comparative studies are required for the establishment of a future variety of standard treatments.

KW - botulinum toxin

KW - bromhidrosis

KW - energy-based device

KW - hyperhidrosis

KW - injectable

KW - microwave thermolysis

KW - osmidrosis

KW - procedure

KW - PROMs

KW - QoL

KW - surgery

KW - systematic review

U2 - 10.1002/jvc2.415

DO - 10.1002/jvc2.415

M3 - Review

AN - SCOPUS:85192701723

JO - JEADV Clinical Practice

JF - JEADV Clinical Practice

SN - 2768-6566

ER -

ID: 393053156