This pilot study will test intra-lesional immunotherapy (MMR vaccine) injections as a treatment for recalcitrant tinea cruris and corporis in patients aged 10-60 years who have not improved with standard antifungal treatments. \*Eligibility: Participants must have recalcitrant tinea, defined as: * Rapid progression or large areas of skin affected, * Infection in multiple family members, especially females and children * Rapid relapse after prior treatment * Suspected resistant T. indotineae (based on travel history or contact with affected individuals from high-prevalence regions) * Failure of at least 2 courses of systemic antifungal therapy in the past 3 months Treatment: Patients will receive intra-lesional MMR vaccine injections into the active borders of affected lesions every 2 weeks for up to 6 weeks. If partial improvement occurs but complete clearance is not achieved, the course may be repeated for another 6 weeks. Pulse itraconazole will be given during the first 2 weeks. Monitoring: At each study visit, clinicians will assess the extent of affected skin and monitor symptoms particularly itching. Safety will be closely observed, including injection-site reactions, fever, initial flare of lesions, and any rare serious allergic reactions. Goal: To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of intra-lesional MMR immunotherapy for patients with tinea that has been difficult to treat.
See this in plain English?
AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Percent reduction in affected body surface area (BSA) from baseline
Timeframe: Assessed at each study visit (every 2 weeks) up to 6 weeks, with extension up to 12 weeks if improvement is notice after initial 6 weeks, but complete resolution isn't achieved.
Abeer Mohamed Elkholy, MD degree of Dermatology