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Intralesional Candidal Antigen Versus Intralesional Zinc Sulphate in Treatment of Cutaneous Warts

Intralesional Candidal Antigen Versus Intralesional Zinc Sulphate in Treatment of Cutaneous Warts, A Randomized Clinical Trial

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03158168
Enrollment
70
Registered
2017-05-18
Start date
2018-03-01
Completion date
2019-12-31
Last updated
2018-07-24

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Warts

Brief summary

Warts are common and infectious viral diseases of the skin and are prevalent worldwide. Warts are caused by the human papilloma virus (HPV), which has more than 100 strains; some of them are known to be premalignant .Although warts can appear at any age, they are more common in children and adolescents. The prognosis of warts cannot be predicted. In some patients they may spontaneously disappear, whereas others show persistence and progression with spreading to other body sites, leading to physical and emotional distress to the patients. \[ 1 \].

Detailed description

Forty percent of children spontaneously clear in two years without treatment owing to natural immunity \[ 2,3.\]. However, warts can persist and increase in size and number \[2\] . Warts may reflect a localized or systemic cell-mediated immune (CMI) deficiency to HPV. Various reasons like lack of production of memory T cells to target HPV infection, failure of clonal expansion of lymphocytes to adequate stimulation, inability of T lymphocytes to traffic to sites of infection and weak effector response mechanism have been hypothesized. \[4\] .\] Consequently, warts are particularly exuberant in patients with Hodgkin's disease, AIDS and those on immunosuppressant \[ 5 \]. The conventional modalities in treatment of warts include destructive therapies such as salicylic acid, trichloroacetic acid, cryotherapy, silver nitrate, phenol, canthiridin, electrocautary, surgical interventions and lasers; antiproliferative agents such as bleomycin, vitamin D analogs, podophyllin, and 5-fluro uracil; antiviral agents such as cidofovir and retinoids. Because of the cumbersome nature of these procedures and a high risk of recurrence, immunotherapy is becoming more and more popular, especially in the treatment of refractory cutaneous and genital warts \[ 6 \] . It enhances recognition of the virus by the immune system. This allows not only clearing of the treated wart, and frequently warts at distant anatomic sites, but also may prevent future clinical infection \[ 7 \] . Immunotherapy in warts can be administered by various methods. The first method is topical application of certain inorganic molecules that are capable of eliciting a contact hypersensitivity reaction with secondary activation of an immunological response \[ 8 \] . A second modality is the use of oral immune modulators such as cimetidine and zinc(10mg/kg/day for 2months) \[ 9 , 10 \] . A third method is Intralesional injection of immunotherapeutic agent that utilizes the ability of the immune system to mount a delayed type hypersensitivity response to various antigens and also the wart tissue leading to production of Th1 cytokines which activate cytotoxic and natural killer cells to eradicate HPV infection. This clears not only the local warts but also distant warts unlike traditional wart therapies \[ 11 \] . There are a few side effects reported by most of the studies. The most common side effect was pain and discomfort during injection, however, serious side effects such as vitiligo-like depigmentation and painful purple digit have also been reported \[ 12 \] . Zinc is important for immune regulation as it stimulates the leucocytes and natural killer cells. It has been shown that there is a deficiency of zinc in patients with multiple or recurrent warts \[ 13 ,14 \].The use of zinc in treatment of warts was proven in many studies either in the topical form or systemic oral therapy \[ 15 \].. However, Little studies have utilized intralesional injection of 2% zinc sulfate solution for the treatment of common wart one of them was of \[16\] .

Interventions

Candida Albicans Antigen injection

DRUGZinc Sulfate

Zinc Sulfate injection

Sponsors

Assiut University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
5 Years to 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

- patients with ages ranging from 10 to 40 years with cutaneous common or planter wart , * or were either resistant to treatment * or had relapsed at least once after treatment with any of the tissue-destructive modalities

Exclusion criteria

.- Patients with any evidence of immunosuppressant, * eczematous skin disorder, * those with any history of hypersensitivity to Candida albicans antigen, * pregnant or lactating women, * and those who received any wart treatment 1 month before the start of the study will be excluded from the study

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
complete resolution of the injected wart9 weeksby photography

Countries

Egypt

Contacts

Primary ContactEman Mohamed Kamal, MD
emohanya@yahoo.com01005369338
Backup ContactRadwa Bakr, MD
radwabakr2011@hotmail.com01119988 115

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 12, 2026