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Treatment of Toenail Onychomycosis
86
Citations
9
References
1995
Year
Antifungal AgentToenail MycosisAntibioticsAntifungal AgentsOperative TreatmentPathologyClinical DermatologyClinical MycologyPodiatryDermatopathologyDermatologyMedicineMycological Cure RateToenail OnychomycosisAntimicrobial ResistanceTreatment Duration
<h3>Background and Design:</h3> The fungicidal mode of action of terbinafine should make it feasible to reduce treatment duration in onychomycosis. For this reason, a randomized, double-blind study in 195 patients with severe dermatophyte infections of the toenails was performed comparing a 24-week treatment with terbinafine (250 mg/d) with a 48-week treatment with micronized griseofulvin (1000 mg/d). <h3>Results:</h3> After 48 weeks, effective treatment was achieved in 67% of the patients treated with terbinafine and in 56% of those treated with griseofulvin (two-tailed<i>P</i>=.120). At a follow-up visit 24 weeks later, cure rates had de- creased to 60% in the terbinafine group and to 39% in the griseofulvin group (two-tailed<i>P</i>=.006). At the same time, the mycological cure rate was 81% with terbinafine and 62% with griseofulvin (two-tailed<i>P</i>=.02). <h3>Conclusions:</h3> This study has demonstrated the longterm therapeutic superiority of terbinafine to high-dose griseofulvin in the treatment of toenail mycosis. Furthermore, with the new antifungal terbinafine, treatment is no longer necessary until all affected nail material has grown out. (Arch Dermatol. 1995;131:919-922)
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