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Efficacy and Safety of Oral Betamethasone Mini-Pulses in Moderate to Severe Alopecia Areata.

Rasha Moumna, Zineb Loubaris, Anas Ahmed Mountassir, Majdouline Obtel, Benzekri Laila et al.
Other Cureus 2025
PubMed DOI CC-BY PDF
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Study Design

Çalışma Türü
retrospective cohort
Örneklem Büyüklüğü
40
Süre
12 weeks
Müdahale
Efficacy and Safety of Oral Betamethasone Mini-Pulses in Moderate to Severe Alopecia Areata. oral betamethasone 2 mg (children) or 4 mg (adults) two consecutive days per week for at least 3 mon
Karşılaştırıcı
Placebo
Etki Yönü
Positive
Yanlılık Riski
Moderate

Abstract

Introduction Alopecia areata (AA) is an acquired autoimmune disorder affecting hair follicles, responsible for non-scarring alopecia with an unpredictable clinical course. Systemic corticosteroids are commonly prescribed in acute or rapidly progressing forms, but their long-term use is limited by potential adverse effects. Intermittent oral corticosteroid regimens, referred to as mini-pulses, have emerged as a promising alternative. Objectives This study aims to assess the efficacy, safety, and sustainability of the response to oral betamethasone mini-pulses in patients with moderate to severe or refractory AA and to explore clinical and trichoscopic predictors of treatment response. Materials and methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study including 40 patients treated for AA at Ibn Sina University Hospital, Morocco, from 2022 to 2025. All patients received oral betamethasone mini-pulses at fixed doses (2 mg for children, 4 mg for adults), administered two consecutive days per week for at least three months, with treatment duration adjusted based on clinical response. Clinical, dermoscopic, and quality of life parameters were assessed using standardized tools, including the Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT), the Alopecia Areata Scale (AAS), Eyebrow and Eyelash Assessment Scales (EBA/ELA), and the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI). Predictors of treatment response and relapse were analyzed statistically. Results A ≥50% hair regrowth (SALT-50) was achieved in 62.5% of patients, including complete regrowth in 25%. Dermoscopic activity markers and DLQI scores also improved significantly after treatment. Adverse events occurred in 20% of cases; all were mild and transitory. Relapses were observed in 15% of patients, mostly partial. Better responses were significantly associated with patchy AA and lower baseline SALT scores. In contrast, poor response correlated with atopic diathesis, including asthma and allergic rhinitis, as well as rapidly progressive forms and higher initial SALT scores. Relapse was associated with autoimmune thyroiditis and vitamin D deficiency. Conclusion Oral betamethasone mini-pulse therapy represents an effective and well-tolerated treatment option for moderate to severe or refractory AA. It is particularly relevant in resource-limited settings where access to advanced therapies such as JAK inhibitors remains restricted. Larger, long-term studies are needed to validate these findings, refine treatment duration, and identify ideal responders.

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Figures

Tables

Table 1

Outcome measureBaselinePost-treatmentp-value
SALT score (mean)54.124.9<0.001
Eyebrow involvement (EBA 0-2, %)37.5%22.5%0.001
Eyelash involvement (ELA 0-2, %)27.5%15%0.019
Body hair involvement (B1-B2, %)20%7.5%0.026
DLQI score (mean)5.21.8<0.001

Table 2

Trichoscopic featureBaseline (%)Post-treatment (%)
Activity signs
   Black dots77.527.5
   Exclamation mark hairs72.520.0
   Broken hairs62.517.5
   Bent hairs20.07.5
   Pohl-Pinkus constrictions17.55.0
Severity signs
   White dots32.520.0
   Yellow dots17.57.5
   Absent follicular openings7.57.5
   Honeycomb pigmentation5.05.0
Regrowth signs
   Vellus hairs15.050.0
   Upright regrowing hairs5.055.0
   Pigtail hairs5.017.5

Table 3

Baseline characteristicsAssociationp-valueStatistical test
Patchy AAFavorable response0.046Fisher’s exact test
Lower baseline SALT scoreFavorable response0.027Mann–Whitney U test
Higher baseline SALT scorePoor response0.023Mann–Whitney U test
Rapidly progressive AA (RP-AA)Poor response0.007Fisher’s exact test
Atopic backgroundPoor response0.046Fisher’s exact test
Autoimmune thyroiditisRelapse0.045Fisher’s exact test
Vitamin D deficiencyRelapse0.024Fisher’s exact test

Table 4

StudynAge range (years)Regimen≥50% regrowth (%)Relapse (%)Adverse events (%)
Khaitan et al., 20041614-365 mg/day, 2 days/week756.225
Deshpande et al., 2011157-450.1 mg/kg/day, 2 days/week + short contact anthralin + topical minoxidil73.313.313.3
Gupta et al., 20192124-275 mg/day, 2 days/week71.42476
Asilian et al., 20211216-603 mg, 1 day/weekMedian SALT reduced from 100% to 74%Not reported0
Present study406-502-4 mg/day, 2 days/week62.51520

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