Onychomycoses are difficult to treat infections of the nail organ with a high recurrence rate. Risk groups include older people, diabetics and patients with immunodeficiency. Pre-existing nail injuries, especially trauma and a warm and humid environment (athletes) also favor infection. The following combination therapy has proven to be an optimized treatment regime.
Onachomycoses combination therapy
DefinitionThis section has been translated automatically.
ImplementationThis section has been translated automatically.
Onychomycoses, combination therapy
- Take medical history: duration of nail changes, evidence of fungus, previous therapy, risk factors
- Clarify differential diagnosis: exclude post-traumatic changes, trophic disorders, psoriatic nail affections
- Prepare native preparation, remove material after proper cleaning. Samples should be taken from 2 places, if possible at the border of the infestation. Milling for mycologically younger material. Acidification with KOH or tetraammonium hydroxide (TEAH). Calcofluor and Blankophor preparations offer a higher sensitivity.
- Create a fungal culture or PCR:
- Mandatory, especially before systemic therapy.
- Classify infestation pattern morphologically (SWO=superficial white onychomycosis; DLSO=distolateral subungual onychomycosis; PSO=proximal subungual onychomycosis; TDO=total dystrophic onychomycosis)
- Remove fungus-contaminated nail material as subtly as possible. Grind nail plate thinly, if necessary by a podiatrist, possibly atraumatic detachment with 40% urea.
- Hygienic measures: Remove artificial nails; disinfect nail tools, change stockings daily, disinfect shoes regularly, wash contaminated textiles at 600 C.
- Topical local therapy: If there is sufficient clinical suspicion, start topical local therapy with nasal nail polish. File the surface of the nail before the first application.
- Choice of antifungal topical: Amorolfin nail polish (not water soluble) once a week. Alternatively Cicloprox solution (water-soluble) 1x/day. Topical monotherapy possible with infestation area <80% of the nail.
- Use of antimycotic systemic therapy: Not for SWO, not for small non-proximal infestation area, not for contraindications to systemic antimycotics. Use with infestation area >80% and/or matrix involvement: topical/systemic combination therapy (systemic monotherapy not advisable).
- Choice of antimycotic systemic therapy: First choice: Terbinafine 250mg/day; second choice: Itraconazole 200mg/day, Fluconazole 150-300mg/week (continuous therapy is preferable to pulse therapy)
- Schedule laboratory checks: Liver and blood lipid values after 4-6 weeks of systemic therapy. Check again after 6 months.
- Check-ups: After 6 weeks, then quarterly. Appropriate visual inspection of findings, ensure equal spacing. If necessary, re-milling of the nail plate / possibly by a podiatrist. Check adherence.
- Duration of therapy: 12-18 months, in any case until clinical freedom from symptoms. Negative culture under therapy not meaningful (!)
- Secondary prophylaxis: Unlimited long-term therapy; preferably with water-insoluble nail varnish (Amorolfin 1x/week or every 2 weeks); alternatively Ciclopirox 1-2x/week (Sigurgeirsson B et al. 2010).
LiteratureThis section has been translated automatically.
- Effendi I et al. (2020) Combination therapy of severe onchomycosis - recommendations of an expert panel. Act Dermatol 46: 311-318
- Sigurgeirssohn B et al. (2010) Efficacy of amorolfine nail lacquer formmprophylaxis of onychomycosis over 3 years. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 24: 910-915