Factors influencing treatment duration of oral propranolol in infantile hemangioma: a five-year retrospective analysis
Qian Li, Liu Xiao, Mengting Su, Hongguang Chen, Haihua Zhang, Nana Cao, Lixiao Jiang, Xiaoyan Liu, Gaolei Zhang

TL;DR
This study finds that factors like age at treatment start and lesion location affect how long propranolol treatment lasts for infantile hemangiomas.
Contribution
The study identifies specific demographic and clinical factors that influence treatment duration for infantile hemangiomas using propranolol.
Findings
Treatment duration increases when therapy starts after 7 months of age.
Lesion location and IH subtype significantly affect treatment time.
Sex and prematurity do not influence treatment duration.
Abstract
Oral propranolol is effective in promoting the involution of infantile hemangiomas (IHs), but treatment outcomes vary widely. To identify demographic and clinical factors influencing the time to achieve complete regression in IH patients treated with propranolol. A retrospective study was conducted on 410 IH patients treated at the Department of Dermatology and Venereology, Capital Center for Children's Health, Capital Medical University, between 2018 and 2023. Patients received propranolol (3 mg/kg/day) and were followed monthly. The primary outcome was the time (months) required to achieve an Achauer grade IV response, defined as complete or near-complete resolution. Treatment was continued until this endpoint was reached. The cohort included 157 males (38.3%) and 253 females (61.7%) with a median age of 2 months (interquartile range, 2–4 months); 36 (8.8%) were preterm. All…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVascular Malformations and Hemangiomas · Teratomas and Epidermoid Cysts · Congenital Ear and Nasal Anomalies
