Table of contents
- Trial overview
- Population and study setting
- Treatments and comparators
- Outcomes and measurements
- Study phase and status
- What this means for patients
Trial overview
The source data describe one interventional study about moisturiser treatment for children with atopic dermatitis, also called eczema.[1] The trial was designed to test whether a newly developed moisturiser could better prevent relapse than a reference cream.[1]
The trial has the ID 2022-501184-41-00 and is listed as completed.[1] It included 270 participants and was run as a Phase 3 study.[1]
Population and study setting
The target population was children with atopic dermatitis, which is a long-term skin condition that causes eczema symptoms.[1] The brief summary says the study focused on preventing relapse in children with AD compared with a reference cream.[1]
The trial data do not give more detailed entry rules, such as age ranges or other medical requirements.[1] Based on the available information, the key point is that the study was built around pediatric eczema care.[1]
Treatments and comparators
The intervention list includes several topical creams used in the study, including Essex, Advantan® 0,1% Creme, Linola Fett, ECURAL ® Fettcreme, 1 mg/g Creme, and Miniderm Duo 20 mg/g + 200 mg/g kräm.[1] “Topical” means the product was applied to the skin.[1]
The brief summary says the newly developed moisturiser was compared with a reference cream.[1] The trial data do not provide a full head-to-head explanation of every product arm, so the main research question is best understood as a comparison of moisturiser-based treatment strategies for relapse prevention.[1]
Outcomes and measurements
The main outcome was relapse of atopic eczema, measured as a hazard ratio.[1] A hazard ratio is a way to compare how often an event happens over time in one group versus another.[1]
In this study, relapse was defined as an episode that, from the participant’s or parent’s or legal guardian’s view, needed stronger treatment in the study area.[1] The date of relapse was recorded in an eDiary and then confirmed by the investigator.[1]
This means the trial did not only look at whether eczema returned, but also used a structured way to record and confirm that event.[1] That makes the result easier to measure in a consistent way across participants.[1]
Study phase and status
The study is listed as Phase 3.[1] Phase 3 trials are later-stage studies that usually examine whether a treatment works well in a larger group of people.[1]
The trial status is Completed.[1] The enrollment number was 270, which gives a sense of the study size.[1]
What this means for patients
For patients and families, this trial is mainly about whether moisturiser-based care can help children with eczema stay well for longer.[1] The study asks a practical question: can one cream strategy reduce the chance that eczema comes back and needs stronger treatment?[1]
Because the available source data are limited to one completed trial, the article can only describe this specific research project and not a full program of studies.[1] The most important takeaways are the condition studied, the pediatric population, the Phase 3 design, and the relapse-focused endpoint.[1]



