Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How vets measure allergic skin disease severity in cats
By Steffan, Jean et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2012·Novartis Animal Health·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Responsiveness and validity of the SCORFAD, an extent and severity scale for feline hypersensitivity dermatitis.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 100 cats with allergic dermatitis, which causes itching and various skin problems, were studied to evaluate a new scale for measuring the severity of their condition and how well treatments worked. The researchers tested two doses of a medication called ciclosporin against a placebo over six weeks. They found that the new SCORFAD scale effectively tracked changes in the cats' skin lesions and itching, helping to determine the success of the treatments. This scale could help veterinarians better assess and treat cats with allergic dermatitis in the future.
People also search for: cat itching treatment · feline allergic dermatitis medication · ciclosporin for cats skin problems
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypersensitivity (allergic) dermatitis (HD) is commonly seen in cats, causing pruritus and various patterns of skin lesions, including at least one of the following: head and neck excoriations, self-induced alopecia, eosinophilic plaques and miliary dermatitis. Few studies have evaluated the efficacy of therapeutic interventions for feline HD, and although various scales have been considered, none has been formally validated for the assessment of disease severity and its response to therapy. OBJECTIVE: To design and validate a novel scale (SCORing Feline Allergic Dermatitis; SCORFAD) to assess the value of different criteria used as outcome measures for the treatment of feline HD and to set minimal thresholds for defining the clinical success of tested interventions. ANIMALS: One hundred client-owned cats. METHODS: The SCORFAD scale was designed to include the four most frequently identified lesion types in feline HD (eosinophilic plaque, head and neck excoriations, self-induced alopecia and miliary dermatitis) across 10 body regions. The extent and severity of each lesion type were graded prior to inclusion and after 3 and 6 weeks in a clinical study to compare the efficacy of two doses of ciclosporin with placebo. RESULTS: The SCORFAD scale was found to exhibit satisfactory content, construct, criterion and sensitivity to change. The percentage reduction in SCORFAD from baseline was determined to be the most valid assessment of clinical response. Inter- and intra-observer reliability was not assessed. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: The SCORFAD scale is proposed for use as a validated tool for the assessment of disease severity and response to therapeutic interventions in clinical trials for feline HD.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22823903/