European Guidelines

Call open · Submission deadline: October 15, 2026

EDF European Guidelines

The European Dermatology Forum (EDF) supports the development and/or updating of European dermatology guidelines and invites clinicians and researchers across Europe to submit their guideline project proposal. The EDF European Guideline Commission prioritizes clinical practice guidelines that have high European relevance for the dermatology community. Therefore, in 2027, two guidelines will be the primary focus: vitiligo and alopecia areata. European clinical practice requires a single, evidence-graded reference to support consistent patient care across Europe.

Select your topic

Prioritized topics — or your own proposal

Select the guideline you wish to lead or propose an alternative guideline. Each guideline project must include the clinical need, proposed scope, and the expertise to be contributed by your working group.

A major update for the JAK-inhibitor era

Guideline update required · completion expected within 15 months

European guidance on vitiligo was last harmonised in 2013. Topical JAK inhibition (ruxolitinib cream, EMA-approved for non-segmental vitiligo in 2023), advances in phototherapy and a growing systemic pipeline, have moved well past that consensus. Clinicians need an updated, evidence-graded algorithm for assessment, treatment sequencing, and maintenance.

0.5–2%

Estimated prevalence worldwide

High

Psychosocial burden and quality-of-life impact

2013

Year of the last harmonised European consensus

Proposed scope
  • Classification (segmental vs non-segmental) and disease activity assessment

  • Validated outcomes — VASI, repigmentation thresholds, patient-reported measures

  • Topical therapy, including JAK and calcineurin inhibitors

  • Phototherapy (NB-UVB) and combination regimens

  • Systemic and emerging therapies

  • Maintenance, relapse prevention and special sites

  • Paediatric care, psychological support and shared decision-making

Target users: Dermatologists, paediatric dermatologists, GPs with a dermatology interest, patient representatives.

Expertise sought: Pigmentary disorders, phototherapy, paediatric dermatology, methodology, patient advocacy.

Europe's first guideline standard for autoimmune hair loss

New guideline · completion expected within 24 months

Alopecia areata currently lacks a harmonised European guideline, despite substantial advances in the field. Baricitinib (2022) and ritlecitinib (2023) are now EMA-approved for the treatment of severe disease, including in adolescents. European dermatology requires a single, evidence-graded reference covering disease severity staging, treatment selection, monitoring, and the management of relapse.

~2%

Estimated lifetime risk in the population

2

Oral JAK inhibitors EMA-approved since 2022

None
Existing harmonised European guideline
Proposed scope
  • Severity assessment and staging (SALT and beyond)

  • Topical, intralesional and systemic corticosteroid use

  • Contact immunotherapy for extensive disease

  • Oral JAK inhibitors — selection, monitoring and stopping rules

  • Paediatric and adolescent treatment pathways

  • Relapse and long-term management

  • Eyebrow, eyelash and nail involvement; psychosocial impact

Last publications

Target users: Dermatologists, trichology specialists, paediatric dermatologists, patient representatives.

Expertise sought: Hair disorders, autoimmunity, paediatric dermatology, pharmacovigilance, methodology, patient advocacy.

Propose your own guideline

New guideline or update · timeline determined by project outline

Two specific guidelines are priorities for this cycle; however, the EDF welcomes project proposals in any area of dermatology and venereology where European practice would benefit from a single, evidence-graded reference. Applicants define the subject, clinical need, and scope. The EDF European Guideline Commission evaluates proposals based on clinical relevance, methodological rigor, opportunities for collaboration, and feasibility.

Outline

your subject, questions and scope

Area of interest

dermatology and venerology

Evaluation
based on clinical need and feasibility
Proposed scope
  • Define the population and the clinical questions (PICO / PIRT)

  • Set the outcomes that matter, with adverse events included

  • Outline the existing guidance in the field and clearly specify the added value your project provides

  • Choose the methodology — systematic review, Delphi or adaptation

  • Propose a multidisciplinary group across at least five countries

  • Include patient representation and a dissemination plan

Last publications
  • No preset reference for an open subject — cite the current evidence and any existing national or international publication in your proposal.

Target users: Defined by your outline proposal.

Expertise sought: Matched to your topic, with methodological and patient advocacy expertise required in every group.

The call in brief

At a glance

Funding

Up to €40,000 for a new guideline and €25,000 for an update. Funding is paid in two instalments: 50% upon selection and 50% upon completion.
Timeline

Up to 24 months for new guidelines and up to 15 months for updates.
Publication

Published in the JEADV or comparable journals. Publications will be reviewed every 3-5 years.
Submission

Submission deadline: October 15, 2026, 23:59 CET. Applications must be submitted by the lead applicant via the application form.

Who can apply

Eligibility

  • Open to members of EDF, EADV or affiliated national societies, European guideline groups, and individuals or institutions with relevant expertise. An EDF Membership is not required.

  • One proposal per call as Convenor. Convenors may not be voting members of the EDF Guideline Commission.

  • The topic must address a clear clinical need. Commercial sponsorship is not permitted.

Submission requirements

Submission requirements

  • One document in English. Methodology and the composition of the team are of primary importance. Projects may employ a systematic review, Delphi process, or guideline adaptation, depending on the project type.

  • Proposal, abstract, and lay summary — The proposed guideline and its objectives, presented in both full and plain language.

  • Clinical need — What is already known, what this project adds, and its impact on clinical practice.

  • Methodology — the proposed review approach, evidence grading, and consensus process.

  • Group and conflicts of interest — Composition of the working group and participating countries, with a declaration of interests from each member.

  • Timeline and budget — A timeline with milestones and a short, justified budget.

  • Dissemination plan — How the guideline will be published, translated, and communicated.

* Conflicts of interest: All members must declare interests from the past five years at the time of submission and keep them updated throughout the process. Declarations are published alongside the guideline. Members with conflicts of interest involving a pharmaceutical manufacturer are excluded from voting on recommendations concerning that company’s products.

EuroGuiDerm standards

Methodology

Guideline projects must follow the EDF (EuroGuiDerm) methodology standards for European dermatology guidelines. Outline proposals must demonstrate how these standards will be applied.

M1

Structured questions

PICO for intervention questions and PIRT for diagnostic questions. Outcomes are ranked from 1-9 according to importance (GRADE).

M2

Systematic review

Conducted in accordance with the Cochrane Handbook, including search strategy, risk-of-bias assessment, and evidence tables. Involvement of a librarian or methodologist is strongly recommended.

M3

Consensus and voting

Up to five overarching principles and 10-15 recommendations. Consensus is reported as percentage agreement: strong consensus (>95%), consensus (75-95%), with >50% required for inclusion of a recommendation.

M4

Conflicts of interest

All members must declare interests from the past five years at the time of submission and keep them updated throughout the process. Declarations are published alongside the guideline. Members with conflicts of interest involving a pharmaceutical manufacturer are excluded from voting on recommendations concerning that company’s products.

Before submission, the guideline draft is reviewed by EDF members with expertise in the respective field.

Proposal assessment

Evaluation criteria

01

Clinical relevance

Addresses a genuine gap in European practice with clear potential benefit for patients.

02

Methodological rigour

Based on a credible review process, GRADE evidence assessment, and a robust consensus methodology.

03

Collaboration

Involves a multidisciplinary, multi-country group with active patient participation.

04

Feasibility

Supported by a realistic timeline, clearly defined roles, and a proportionate budget.

After submission

Proposal review

Three-stage process, concluding with a decision by the EDF Guideline Commission

Stage 1

Pre-eligibility

Rapid assessment of topic relevance and alignment with scope.

Stage 2

Eligibility

Review for administrative and methodological completeness.

Stage 3

Commission decision

Approval, request for revision, or rejection by the EDF Guideline Commission.

How to apply

How to apply

  • Assemble your group
    Identify your Convenor, methodologist and patient representatives. EDF membership is not required.

  • Draft your proposal
    Address the six sections outlined above, with particular emphasis on methodology and team composition.

  • Collect declarations
    Ensure each proposed member submits a conflict of interest declaration.

  • Submit the form
    Complete the online application form before the deadline.

Ready to lead

Start your

guideline proposal

Complete the online application form — EDF membership not required. The form produces a structured record of your proposed outline.

Submission deadline: October 15, 2026, 23:59 CET
Contact us: guidelines@euroderm.org