Scabies

  • Caused by an infestation with a tiny parasitic mite which burrows underneath and lives in the skin
  • Itching and scratching cause sores that can get infected with bacteria and lead to kidney and rheumatic heart problems or sepsis
  • Spread by direct skin to skin contact — mites can only live 2–3 days off the body
  • To stop spread you must treat person and all close contacts including family and household

Ask

  • Itching, scratching
  • Rash — hidden by clothing or on private part
  • Other family members with scabies
  • Anyone in family or community with crusted scabies — possible source of infection
    • Always consider this for children or elderly people with frequent presentations

Check

  • Calculate age-appropriate REWS
    • Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
    • Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
  • Weight, BGL

Do

  • If infected sores — treat as for impetigo (school sores) at same time as treating scabies 

Do — treat with topical permethrin 5% OR oral ivermectin

  • Tell person itching may last for 1–4 weeks after treatment with permethrin or ivermectin
  • ALSO treat all household members, close contacts and people who have had close physical contact (eg person holding child with scabies) with permethrin 5% cream

For topical permethrin 5% cream

  • In clinic demonstrate whole-body application of thin layer
  • Adults and children — leave on for at least 8 hours. Best overnight under clean bed clothes
  • Babies under 6 months — leave on for 6–8 hours
  • Repeat treatment in 1 week to kill any new mites that hatch after first application

Applying scabies creams or lotions

  • Put on clean, dry skin — best at night before bed and left on for at least 8 hours under clean pyjamas or clothes 
  • Apply to whole body including scalp and face and behind ears — avoid eyes, lips, mouth. 
    • If hair very thick or infestation very bad — may need to shave head. Always get permission from person/carer
  • Work carefully down whole body. Always include between fingers and toes, soles of feet, under nails AND body creases — behind ears, under jaw, neck, armpits, back, bottom, groin, under breasts AND joints and joints creases — elbows, knees, heels
  • Advise to put cream on hands again after washing and put on child’s hands again before bed

For ivermectin — give oral single dose with food (doses)

  • Do not give to children under 5 years or less than 15kg OR women who are or could be pregnant or are breastfeeding — do urine pregnancy test if not sure or no contraception
  • Repeat in 7–14 days to kill any new mites that hatch

Prevention

  • Encourage hand washing and short finger nails
  • Ask family to wash clothes and sheets with laundry detergent and dry in sun and to air blankets and mattresses in full sun
  • Bed linen and sheets, towels and clothes that cannot be washed can be decontaminated by placing in a sealed plastic bag for at least 8 days — scabies eggs will hatch mites which will die
  • Home visit to look for and treat other people with scabies or crusted scabies — may be source of infection

Do — if difficult case or treatment failure

  • 2 or more presentations of scabies where
    •  Permethrin 5% cream application or oral ivermectin has not worked
    • AND reinfection unlikely because child treated properly/in clinic, repeat application of cream applied or repeat dose of ivermectin has been given and all contacts treated
  • If severe scabies affecting a lot of skin and person sick — medical consult

Step 1

Whole-body application of benzyl benzoate 25% lotion — see applying scabies creams and lotions 

  • Child under 6 monthsdo not use
  • Child 6–23 months — dilute with 3 parts water
  • Child 2–12 years and adults with sensitive skin — dilute with equal part water
  • Occasionally causes severe skin irritation — usually resolves in 15 minutes
    • Test on small area of skin first — wait for 10 minutes
    • If severe reaction — dilute with equal part water for adults. Do not use for children
  • Leave on for 24 hours

Step 2

Repeat topical treatment in 1 week — whole body application of benzyl benzoate 25% lotion as in Step 1

Follow-up

  • Make sure second dose of treatment has been given
    • After 7 days for topical permethrin 5% cream or benzyl benzoate lotion — applied in clinic if required
    • After 7–14 days for oral ivermectin 
  • Return to clinic 3 weeks after second dose of treatment completed to check response
  • If person has scabies often — consider
    • Was cream/lotion applied properly
    • Did whole family/household get treated
    • Did everyone get second treatment 
    • Is there someone with crusted scabies
    • Is it hard to maintain good hygiene at home — washing facilities and household cleaning
    • Less common skin conditions that need review
  • Make sure anyone in community with crusted scabies gets treatment as a high priority — unless they are treated, contacts will keep getting scabies
  • If a lot of scabies in community — consider community healthy skin program
    • Where prevalence of scabies is assessed as 10% or higher consider an ivermectin-based mass drug administration (MDA) program
    • Talk with primary care team,  PHU  and infectious disease specialist 

Crusted scabies

  • Severe type of scabies caused by same mite — not sores from infected scabies. Person’s immune system can’t control number of mites, so thousands of mites and very infectious
  • High risk of serious bacterial infection in more severe cases. Lifelong risk of recurrence, reduced life expectancy — manage as a chronic conditions
  • Can involve 'shame' and social isolation — take care to be culturally sensitive

Check

  • Look for thickened, scaly skin patches — may be 1–2 areas (eg bottom, hands, feet, shoulders) or may cover whole body with thick/flaky crust
  • Scale may have distinctive creamy colour, even in dark skinned people
  • Can look like tinea, psoriasis, eczema, dermatitis, impetigo (school sores) with a crust
  • Often not itchy

Do not

  • Do not confuse crusted scabies with severe scabies (with or without crusted skin sores) or tinea

Do

For each episode

  • Blood for FBC, UEC, LFT, CRP, HbA1c and blood cultures
  • Skin scrapings — scabies microscopy, fungal culture. Use to confirm diagnosis and for notification to PHU
  • If associated with impetigo (school sores) — collect swab for MC&S
  • If associated with nail disease — collect nail clippings for fungal growth

Diagnosis 

  • If crusted scabies suspected — urgent medical consult as soon as possible
  • Can be difficult to diagnosis — must discuss with specialist
  • Must notify confirmed cases — based on laboratory finding of scabies mites on scraping AND infectious disease specialist or dermatologist consult of in person, via photos (with consent) or videoconference
  • May consider if not done previously — blood for HIV (repeat if ongoing risk), HTLV-1, ANA,  IgE/immunoglobulin, T-cell subsets
    • If ANA positive take blood for dsDNA, ENA, C3, C4

Always talk with PHU or infectious diseases specialist

  • Confirmed cases get public health response via clinic with contact tracing and treatment of household and close contacts
  • Most people with crusted scabies need to be sent to hospital
    • People with Grade 2 or Grade 3 always send to hospital
    • Some people with mild Grade 1 can be managed in community in consult with infectious diseases unit or specialist scabies service

Grade severity

  • Choose best option in each category and add numbers to get score — Table 7.32
  • Assessment should always be made in consultation with PHU/infectious diseases specialist

A — Distribution and extent of crusting

  1. Wrists, web spaces, feet only — less than 10% of total body surface area (TBSA)
  2. As above PLUS forearms, lower legs, buttocks, trunk OR 10–30% TBSA
  3. As above PLUS scalp OR more than 30% TBSA

B — Crusting/shedding

  1. Mild crusting (less than 5mm deep), minimal skin shedding
  2. Moderate crusting (5–10mm deep), moderate skin shedding
  3. Severe crusting (more than 10mm deep), profuse skin shedding

C — Past episodes

  1. Never had it before
  2. Already been in hospital 1–3 times for crusted scabies OR depigmentation of elbows, knees
  3. Already been in hospital 4 or more times for crusted scabies OR depigmentation of elbows, knees, legs/back OR residual skin thickening or scaly skin

D — Skin conditions

  1. No cracking or pyoderma (pus in skin)
  2. Any of — multiple pustules, weeping sores, superficial skin cracking
  3. Deep skin cracking with bleeding, widespread purulent exudates (pussy fluids)

Table 7.32   

Score of grade severity

Do not

Do not treat patients with Grade 2 or 3 crusted scabies in the community — for all suspected cases talk with PHU/infectious diseases specialist

Do — Grade 1 infection only

Can trial community management in consult with infectious diseases unit or specialist scabies service. Frequent clinical supervision needed — best with directly observed therapy (DOT)

  • Give ivermectin oral once a day on days 0, 1, 7 — doses
    • Do not give to children under 5 years or less than 15kg OR women who are or could be pregnant or are breastfeeding — do urine pregnancy test if not sure or no contraception 
  • Whole-body application of topical agent — see applying scabies creams or lotions
    • Put on dry skin after soaking and scrubbing skin in bath or shower
    • Apply every second day for first week THEN twice a week until cured
  • Benzyl benzoate 25% lotion
    • Child under 6 monthsdo not use
    • Child 6–23 months — dilute with 3 parts water
    • Child 2–12 years and sensitive adults — dilute with equal parts water
    • Occasionally causes severe skin irritation — usually resolves in 15 minutes
    • Test on small area of skin first — leave for 10 minutes
    • If severe reaction — dilute with equal part water for adults. Do not use for children
    • Leave on for 24 hours
  • OR permethrin 5% cream — if benzyl benzoate not available or not tolerated
    • Leave on for at least 8 hours (overnight)
  • Use lactic acid and urea cream every second day to soften skin — use on different day to scabies cream

Treating family and house

  • Aim to make household a ‘scabies-free zone’ to protect person from reinfection after treatment
  • Educate person and family about what this means, includes treatment for visitors so person who gets crusted scabies can avoid reinfection
  • Treat all household members, family and close contacts for scabies with permethrin 5% cream
  • Work with hospital to ensure person not discharged home before all contracts treated
  • Ask family to make sure that while having treatment with topical permethrin cream or oral ivermectin they
    • Wash underwear, bed clothes, towels and bed linen on hot 60*C wash cycle
    • Take mattresses, blankets and doonas outside or hang on the washing line in full sunlight for 72 hours
    • Vacuum and sweep floor and soft furnishings to remove skin particles
  • Sensitive management of household is needed due to stigma and chronic nature of disease

Long-term follow-up of crusted scabies

Secondary prevention
For people getting recurrent crusted scabies or with high risk of re-exposure, eg living in house with young children

  • Give supervised whole-body application of topical treatment preferably with benzyl benzoate lotion — every 2–4 weeks for 6 months THEN review
  • If reinfection — infectious disease specialist consult about management
  • Treat early before crusts form

Review

  • At 2 weeks and 4 weeks after discharge THEN every 4 weeks to check skin for signs of reinfection — especially hands, shoulders, bottom
  • Moisturise daily to keep skin soft, eg sorbolene
  • Regular reviews and early treatment if reinfected — important to break cycle of scabies transmission and community outbreaks
  • Lifelong follow-up is needed while living in scabies endemic area

Develop chronic care management plan

  • High risk of reinfection
  • Need good communication between acute and primary care providers
  • Provide ongoing education — important that person and family understand
    • About crusted scabies
    • What they can do to self-manage
    • Importance of a 'scabies-free zone'