Claudia Zeidler
University of Münster
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Publication
Featured researches published by Claudia Zeidler.
Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2016
Sonja Ständer; Claudia Zeidler; C Riepe; S. Steinke; F. Fritz; Philipp Bruland; Iñaki Soto-Rey; Michael Storck; Tove Agner; Matthias Augustin; C. Blome; F Dalgard; A.W.M. Evers; Simone Garcovich; Margarida Gonçalo; J. Lambert; Franz J. Legat; T Leslie; L. Misery; Ulrike Raap; Adam Reich; Ekin Şavk; Markus Streit; E. Serra-Baldrich; Jacek C. Szepietowski; Joanna Wallengren; Elke Weisshaar; Martin Dugas
Chronic pruritus is a frequently occurring symptom of various dermatoses that causes a high burden and impaired quality of life. An effective anti pruritic therapy is important for the patient, but its effectiveness is difficult to evaluate. Diverse methods and interpretations of pruritic metrics are utilized in clinical trials and the daily clinical practice in different countries, resulting in difficulties comparing collected data.
Journal Der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft | 2017
Sonja Ständer; Claudia Zeidler; Matthias Augustin; Gudrun Bayer; Andreas E. Kremer; Franz J. Legat; Peter Maisel; Thomas Mettang; Martin Metz; Alexander Nast; Volker Niemeier; Ulrike Raap; Gudrun Schneider; Hartmut Ständer; Petra Staubach; Markus Streit; Elke Weisshaar
Associated with a host of different diseases, pruritus is a cardinal symptom that poses an interdisciplinary diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. Over time, that symptom may progress independently of the initial cause, thus losing its function as a warning sign and turning into a clinically relevant disease of its own. In Germany, approximately 13.5 % of the general population are affected by chronic pruritus, with an incidence of 7 %. All forms of chronic pruritus require targeted treatment consisting of (a) diagnosis and management of the underlying disease, (b) dermatological treatment of primary or secondary (for example, dry skin, scratch lesions) symptoms, (c) symptomatic antipruritic treatment, and (d) psychological/psychotherapeutic treatment in case of an underlying or associated psychological or psychosomatic condition. Medical care of patients with chronic pruritus should therefore include an interdisciplinary approach, in particular with respect to diagnosis and therapy of the underlying disease as well as in terms of the management of treatment and adverse events. The objective of the present interdisciplinary guidelines is to define and standardize diagnostic and therapeutic procedures in patients with chronic pruritus. This is a short version of the current S2 guidelines on chronic pruritus. The long version may be found at www.awmf.org.
Acta Dermato-venereologica | 2017
S. Steinke; Gutknecht M; Claudia Zeidler; Dieckhöfer Am; Herrlein O; Lüling H; Sonja Ständer; Matthias Augustin
In brachioradial pruritus and notalgia paraesthetica, the 8% capsaicin patch is a novel and effective, but cost-intense, therapy. Routine data for 44 patients were collected 6 months retrospectively and prospectively to first patch application. The cost to health insurance and the patient, and patient-reported outcomes were analysed (visual analogue scale, numerical rating scale, verbal rating scale for pruritus symptoms, Dermatological Life Quality Index, and Patient Benefit Index). Mean inpatient treatment costs were reduced by €212.31, and mean outpatient treatment and medication costs by €100.74 per patient (p.p.). However, these reductions did not offset the high cost of the patch itself (€767.02 p.p.); thus the total cost to health insurance increased by €453.97 p.p. (p ≤ 0.01). The additional costs of therapy to the patient decreased by €441.06, thus the overall cost p.p. remained approximately the same (€3,306.03 vs. €3,318.94). Capsaicin patch therapy resulted in reduced pruritus, improved quality of life and greater patient benefit, thus long-term cost-efficiency analyses are necessary.
Acta Dermato-venereologica | 2016
Bobko S; Claudia Zeidler; Nani Osada; C Riepe; Bettina Pfleiderer; Pogatzki-Zahn E; Andrey Lvov; Sonja Ständer
Category of diseases Dermatological disease 6 (atopic predisposition) Neurological disease 1 (generalized brachioradial pruritus) Systemic disease 0 Mixed origin* 21 Unclear origin 2 *Co-factors of mixed origin Dermatological factors (n = 19) Atopic predisposition 15 Dry skin 2 Eczema 2 Systemic factors (n = 31) Sorbitol intolerance 12 Lactose intolerance 1 Helicobacter pylori 3 Anaemia (iron, vitamin B12 deficiency) 5 Diabetes mellitus 3 Hepatobiliary diseases 4 Nephrosclerosis 1 Drug-induced 2 Psychosomatic factors (n = 7) Psychosomatic cofactors 6 Depression 1
Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2018
M. P. Pereira; S. Steinke; Claudia Zeidler; C. Forner; C Riepe; Matthias Augustin; S. Bobko; Florence Dalgard; J. Elberling; Simone Garcovich; Uwe Gieler; Margarida Gonçalo; Jon Anders Halvorsen; T. Leslie; Martin Metz; Adam Reich; Ekin Şavk; Gunter Schneider; E. Serra-Baldrich; H. Ständer; Markus Streit; Joanna Wallengren; K. Weller; Andreas Wollenberg; Philipp Bruland; Iñaki Soto-Rey; Michael Storck; Martin Dugas; Elke Weisshaar; Jacek C. Szepietowski
The term prurigo has been used for many decades in dermatology without clear definition, and currently used terminology of prurigo is inconsistent and confusing. Especially, itch‐related prurigo remains unexplored regarding the epidemiology, clinical profile, natural course, underlying causes, available treatments and economic burden, although burdensome and difficult to treat.
Current problems in dermatology | 2016
Athanasios Tsianakas; Claudia Zeidler; Sonja Ständer
Characterized by the clinical presentation of individual to multiple symmetrically distributed, hyperkeratotic, and intensely itchy papules and nodules, prurigo nodularis (PN) is a rare disease that emerges in patients with chronic pruritus due to continuous scratching over a long period of time. The itching and scratching of the lesions contribute to the vicious cycle that makes this disease difficult to treat, thus reducing the quality of life of affected patients. The pathogenesis of PN is ambiguous, although immunoneuronal crosstalk is implicated. Its etiology was found to be heterogenous. It can emerge as the symptom of various dermatological, neurological, psychiatric, and systemic diseases. There is currently no approved therapy for PN. However, contemporary therapies consist of calcineurin inhibitors, capsaicin, topical steroids, UV therapy, and a systemic application of antihistamines, anticonvulsants, μ-opioid receptor antagonists, and immunosuppressants. Multimodal therapy should be utilized in order to achieve optimal results, including topical and systemic symptomatic therapies.
Acta Dermato-venereologica | 2018
Manuel P. Pereira; Lüling H; Dieckhöfer Am; S. Steinke; Claudia Zeidler; Sonja Ständer
Brachioradial pruritus (BRP) and notalgia paraesthetica (NP) represent 2 of the most common neuropathic itch syndromes. A total of 58 consecutive patients presenting at the Center for Chronic Pruritus, University Hospital Münster, were analysed with regard to clinical presentation, anatomical and morphological pathologies, impairment in quality of life, and response to treatment with topical capsaicin. Patients with BRP reported stinging and burning more often than those with NP. In the BRP group structural magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities more frequently correlated with localization of the symptoms compared with in patients with NP. In addition, intraepidermal nerve fibre density was decreased in lesional skin in patients with BRP, but not in those with NP, confirming the neuropathic origin in BRP. Topical capsaicin resulted in a significantly higher alleviation of itch and pain intensity and improvement in quality of life in patients with BRP compared with those with NP, which may reflect clinical and aetiological differences between the conditions.
Acta Dermato-venereologica | 2017
Sonja Ständer; Blome C; Anastasiadou Z; Claudia Zeidler; Jung Ka; Tsianakas A; Neufang G; Matthias Augustin
Currently valid itch intensity scales, such as the visual analogue scale (VAS), are indispensable, but they can be influenced by the patients overall health status. The aim of this study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Dynamic Pruritus Score (DPS), a new instrument comparing reduction in current pruritus with a defined earlier time-point. Eighty-one randomly selected adults (50 females, mean age 53.9 years) recorded their pruritus at visit 1 and repeatedly at visit 2 on the DPS, VAS, numerical rating scale, and on health status questionnaires (EuroQol; EQ-5D), skin-related quality of life (Dermatology Life Quality Index; DLQI), anxiety and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; HADS) and patient benefit (Patient Benefit Index; PBI). Intraclass correlation showed high reliability for both DPS and VAS (r < 0.9, p < 0.001), while the DPS has shown higher concurrent validity (rDPS to PBI = 0.570; p < 0.001). The DPS can then be considered an alternative instrument to the VAS for assessment of pruritus in adults. Further research is needed to confirm these results with a more representative sample size.
Acta Dermato-venereologica | 2017
Gernart M; Athanasios Tsianakas; Claudia Zeidler; C Riepe; Nani Osada; Pihan D; Sonja Ständer
Performing a reliable assessment of chronic pruritus remains a challenge. Electronic diaries are often used, but many of the scales have not been validated. ItchApp© was developed for Android smartphones in order to address this lack. A total of 40 subjects with chronic pruritus completed questionnaires both on paper and with ItchApp© (verbal rating scale, numerical rating scale, dynamic pruritus score) in order to validate the software application. Strong correlations were found for test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient: 0.865-0.977) and convergent validity (Spearmans r: 0.442-0.924). A feasibility questionnaire for ItchApp© revealed a high level of user friendliness and compliance. This was confirmed in a randomized controlled trial with 68 subjects, for which the clinically important difference in the numerical rating scale values for ItchApp© was calculated (2.61 points). In summary, ItchApp© is a recently developed eDiary that can provide experts with a reliable evaluation of patients with chronic pruritus. It will be made available for future clinical trials.
Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2018
M. P. Pereira; H. Lüling; A. Dieckhöfer; S. Steinke; Claudia Zeidler; K. Agelopoulos; Sonja Ständer
Topical capsaicin shows efficacy in the treatment of brachioradial pruritus (BRP); however, its mechanisms of action remain unclear.