A significant gap between inadequate pharmacotherapy and substantial unmet needs in palmar hyperhidrosis management in China: insights from a questionnaire-based survey among outpatients
Ning Pang, Yi Liu, Chaoqun Ma, Yingkun Liu, Lin Huang, Xiaohong Zhang, Yanguo Liu

TL;DR
This survey highlights poor treatment options and high unmet needs for managing hand sweat disorders in China, showing many patients seek better drug solutions.
Contribution
The study reveals real-world treatment gaps and patient preferences for pharmacotherapy in Chinese palmar hyperhidrosis patients.
Findings
Only 38.1% of patients had received pharmacotherapy, with low efficacy reported.
Gender and disease severity strongly influence treatment choices.
Half of patients remain open to future pharmacotherapy, preferring topical and less frequent dosing.
Abstract
Palmar hyperhidrosis, characterized by excessive sweating primarily affecting the hands, significantly impairs quality of life and psychological well-being. Although topical agents, iontophoresis, microwave therapy, and sympathectomy are established interventions, real-world treatment patterns and pharmacotherapeutic adequacy among Chinese patients remain poorly delineated. An anonymous, questionnaire-based survey was conducted among consecutive patients at a tertiary thoracic surgery clinic in China between March 2023 and October 2024. A total of 363 valid responses were collected and analyzed using SPSS 27.0. Descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression were used to evaluate treatment patterns, patient preference, and predictors of treatment selection. The study cohort was composed predominantly of individuals with severe disease (87.3% HDSS grade 3–4), and nearly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSympathectomy and Hyperhidrosis Treatments · Botulinum Toxin and Related Neurological Disorders · Pathogenesis and Treatment of Hiccups
