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Comparing the Efficacy of Oral Fluconazole Versus Oral Itraconazole in Treating Resistant Tinea Corporis
Sponsor: Urooj Fatima
Summary
Tinea corporis (commonly called "ringworm of the body") is a skin infection caused by fungi that often becomes difficult to treat when it persists despite creams or other medicines. In recent years, many patients have developed infections that do not respond to routine antifungal treatments, which causes long-term itching, redness, and scaling of the skin. This study will test two commonly used oral antifungal drugs - fluconazole and itraconazole - in people with resistant tinea corporis. Adults aged 18-70 years who have had persistent disease for at least six months will be enrolled at the Dermatology Department of CDA Hospital, Islamabad. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups. One group will receive itraconazole 200 mg once daily for four weeks, and the other group will receive fluconazole 150 mg every other day for four weeks. Neither group will know which medicine they are receiving (blinded allocation). The main goal is to find out which medicine works better in achieving complete clinical resolution - meaning no redness, no scaling, no itching, and no visible skin lesions - after four weeks of treatment. Doctors will measure the severity of symptoms using a standard scoring system, and patients will also report their level of itching. The findings will help guide doctors in Pakistan and similar regions in choosing the most effective oral antifungal for patients with resistant tinea corporis, improving both treatment success and patient quality of life.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 70 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
126
Start Date
2025-11-01
Completion Date
2026-03-10
Last Updated
2026-01-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Itraconazole (200 mg)
Oral itraconazole 200 mg once daily for 4 weeks. Assigned to participants in the Itraconazole Group. FDA-approved antifungal drug being evaluated for comparative effectiveness in resistant tinea corporis.
Fluconazole 150 mg
Oral fluconazole 150 mg every other day for 4 weeks. Assigned to participants in the Fluconazole Group. FDA-approved antifungal drug being evaluated for comparative effectiveness in resistant tinea corporis.
Locations (1)
CDA Hospital Islamabad
Islamabad, Punjab Province, Pakistan