• J Rheumatol · Sep 1992

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    Intravenous iloprost treatment of Raynaud's phenomenon and ischemic ulcers secondary to systemic sclerosis.

    • F M Wigley, J R Seibold, R A Wise, D A McCloskey, and W P Dole.
    • Department of Medicine, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ.
    • J Rheumatol. 1992 Sep 1; 19 (9): 1407-14.

    ObjectiveWe conducted this study to assess the clinical usefulness and physiologic effects of intravenous iloprost in patients with Raynaud's phenomenon secondary to systemic sclerosis.MethodsThirty-five patients with Raynaud's phenomenon secondary to systemic sclerosis, including 11 with digital ischemic ulcerations, were enrolled in a double blind placebo controlled parallel study in 2 centers. Following a 2 week washout, subjects received intravenous iloprost (0.5-2.0 ng/kg/min) or saline by continuous infusion for 6 h on 5 consecutive days. Clinical assessments, status of digital ulcers, measures of in vivo platelet activation and detailed studies of peripheral vascular response to cold challenge, were performed at entry, at 5 days of therapy and at biweekly intervals for 10 weeks.ResultsComplete healing of all cutaneous lesions (ulcers, fissures, and paronychia) was observed 10 weeks after treatment in 6 of 7 patients receiving iloprost versus none of 4 receiving placebo (p = 0.015). Ischemic digital tip ulcers completely healed in all 4 patients with ulcers in the iloprost group, but none in the placebo group (p = 0.029). Patient diaries of frequency, duration and symptoms of Raynaud's phenomenon showed improvement in both groups. Critical ischemic temperature (finger temperature during controlled cold challenge at which Raynaud's or loss of detectable digital blood flow occurred) progressively decreased in the iloprost group from 21.3 +/- 7.3 degrees C at baseline to a minimum of 16.1 +/- 3.2 degrees C at 8 weeks after treatment (p = 0.076), whereas no consistent changes were observed in the placebo group. Treatment was associated with improvement in the rate of skin temperature recovery following cold challenge. No changes were noted in ambient digital skin temperature, total digital blood flow, finger systolic pressure or in measures of in vivo platelet activation. One subject dropped out with chest pain, but adverse effects of nausea, vomiting, headache and jaw pain were otherwise limited to the 5 days of drug infusion.ConclusionIloprost appears useful for the treatment of digital ulcers in systemic sclerosis and is associated with evidence of prolonged physiologic improvement although the mechanism of this effect remains unclear.

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