Pilonidal Sinus Clinical Trial
Official title:
Topical Anti-Androgens in Pilonidal Sinus Disease
The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to test the topical drug clascoterone in patients with pilonidal disease, which is a common, benign skin condition of the gluteal cleft. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Does clascoterone improve the severity of pilonidal disease as scored by a physician? - Does clascoterone improve patient symptoms due to pilonidal disease? - Does clascoterone improve the inflammation seen under the microscope in pilonidal disease removed at surgery Participants will apply clascoterone or a placebo cream to the diseased area for 3 months. They will be assessed every 4 weeks for disease severity assessed by a physician viewing patient photos and a symptom-based survey. Researchers will compare participants who received clascoterone treatment to those who received placebo.
This is a randomized, double-blinded placebo-controlled trial. Recruitment The investigators will recruit patients from the University of Pennsylvania colorectal surgery clinics which consist of six high-volume surgeons and five advance practice providers across three hospitals serving a major metropolitan area. Patients considered for elective surgery will be recruited for the study and undergo a thorough informed consent process. Patients with asymptomatic disease and those with acute abscesses will be excluded as will patients who are pregnant or concurrently on a systemic anti-androgen (i.e. spironolactone). At the intake visit, patients will undergo a 1:1 randomization performed by the University of Pennsylvania's Investigational Drug Service (IDS). Recruited subjects will receive clascoterone or a vehicle cream matched for consistency, color, and container so that both subject and investigator are blinded to the assignment. At the intake visit, subjects will be advised to apply cream to cover the affected area twice daily for 12 weeks. At the intake visit, baseline disease assessment will be obtained including demographics, height and weight, medication usage, and personal history of PSD such as disease onset and prior procedures. Baseline disease measurements and medical photography will be obtained. Photographs will be taken with a dedicated camera, patients given a codified study ID, and data entered into a deidentified, HIPAA- compliant database. I. Objective assessment of Disease Severity: Medical photography and analysis To objectively evaluate PSD, the investigators will obtain physical measurements of disease extent (left to right, cranial to caudal) and obtain disease photographs at baseline and weeks 4, 8, and 12. Photographs will be collected, deidentified, and provided to two colorectal surgeons for scoring. Surgeons will be asked to compare each timepoint to baseline and rate the PSD severity as significantly worsened, mildly worsened, unchanged, mildly improved, or significantly improved. Discrepant evaluations between surgeons will be referred to a third blinded surgeon. II. Assessment of Dermatology Quality of Life Randomized subjects will be administered the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) at baseline and at 4, 8, and 12 weeks. The DLQI is a 10-question survey scored from 0-30 that has been applied widely across multiple dermatologic conditions and covers a range of potential quality of life impacts over a weekly basis. Specifically, the DLQI inquires about the impact of skin disease on symptoms ("Over the past week, how itchy, painful, or stinging has your skin been?"), daily activities, leisure, work and school, and personal relationships, as well as a question of impact of treatment ("Over the last week, how much of a problem has the treatment of your skin been?"). Subjects respond Very much, A lot, A little, or Not at all for descending scores of 3 to zero. A score at or above 10 is considered a significant impact on quality of life. Responses to the individual questions will be summed and responses compared between groups after unblinding at data analysis. III. The investigators anticipate that a large portion of subjects in both groups will ultimately undergo surgery. Those that undergo surgery within 4 weeks will be selected for these analyses, on the hypothesis that the effect of clascoterone may subside at a longer interval. At surgery, blinded investigators will measure the left-right, cranial-caudal, and superficial-deep measurements of the excisional defect with a sterile ruler. The investigators will then follow patients with chart review in the electronic medical record for 8 weeks postoperatively to assess for immediate wound complications such as cellulitis, wound separation, abscess, and early recurrence. III. Assessment of Cutaneous Inflammation A full thickness representative sample of the excised pilonidal cyst and adjacent normal tissue will be obtained at operation, fixed in formalin and delivered to the skin phenomics core of the University of Pennsylvania Skin Biology Disease Research Core (SBDRC). Following de-paraffination, rehydration, antigen retrieval, and blocking as necessary, SBDRC-validated antibodies will be applied to characterize the inflammatory infiltrate, specifically anti- CD3 (T- cells and Natural Killer Cells), anti-CD4 (helper T-cells), anti-CD8 (cytotoxic T-cells), anti-CD68 (macrophages), anti-CD79 (B cells). Investigators blinded to treatment groups will assess the specimens for epidermal, dermal, and subcuticular inflammatory infiltrates, hyperkeratosis, and follicular hyperplasia. Antibody-positive cells will be counted in six randomly selected fields under a light microscope at 400x magnification. Cell counts will be tallied and means and standard deviations compared between groups. ;
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