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Studies highlight diagnostic and treatment challenges in hidradenitis suppurativa
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Patients with hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) may be misdiagnosed when they see providers who are not dermatologists – as is usually the case during the initial years of their disease, according to a large analysis of medical claims data.
The findings highlight the need for visual diagnostic aids and specific guidelines for treating HS that target nondermatologists, Melissa Butt, MPH, of Penn State Hershey (Pa.) Medical Center, said during an interview at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. She presented the findings during a poster session at the meeting.
HS is a chronic inflammatory disease of the hair follicles that affects 0.5%-4% of people in the United States. In past studies, up to 12 years elapsed between disease onset and diagnosis, in part because patients often cannot readily access dermatologists, Ms. Butt said. To better understand patterns of health care use during the years leading up to HS diagnosis, she and her colleagues used MarketScan data to identify 1,733 patients with HS-specific medical care claims filed in 2012 and 2013. Then they looked back at medical claims for these patients during 2008 through 2011, before the patients were diagnosed with HS. The cohort averaged 37 years of age (standard deviation, 15 years), and 73% were female.
Among 239,892 claims filed before patients were diagnosed with HS, 11,381 (4.7%) included codes for other diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissues, Ms. Butt said. Dermatologists filed only 31% of these skin-specific claims, while 69% were filed by other providers, such as family practitioners, internists, emergency department physicians, and acute care hospitalists.
Notably, about two-thirds of the skin-specific diagnostic codes could have represented a misdiagnosis of HS. These codes included conditions such as abscesses, carbuncles, local infections, ulcers, and diseases of the sebaceous glands.
The fact that 78% of visits occurred in offices and other outpatient settings further underscores the need to improve the detection and care of HS in these environments, Ms. Butt said. Given current national shortages of dermatologists, visual HS diagnostic aids and “detailed, multistep clinical practice guidelines” for nondermatologists could help improve care of HS while patients wait to see the specialists, she added.
A second poster presented at the meeting provided results of a study on the use and impact of antibiotics in the treatment of HS. Alexander Fischer of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and his associates studied antibiotic prescriptions and bacterial cultures from the lesions of 239 patients with HS who were treated at Johns Hopkins medical facilities between 2010 and 2015. Not only were 51% of HS patients on antibiotics at the time of culture, but these patients’ lesions were significantly more likely to contain antibiotic-resistant bacteria than were those of patients not on antibiotics.
Strikingly, Proteus species were isolated from nearly half of patients on trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX), and 88% of colonies were resistant to TMP/SMX, while only 13% of cultures from untreated patients grew Proteus (P less than .001) and all were TMP/SMX-susceptible (P less than .001). Likewise, 100% of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains from patients prescribed ciprofloxacin were resistant to it, compared with a 10% background rate of ciprofloxacin resistance among MRSA from patients not taking antibiotics (P = .04). In addition, the proportion of other S. aureus strains that were clindamycin-resistant was higher when patients were taking this antibiotic than when they were not (63% versus 17%; P = .03).
The results “raise questions” about whether antibiotics should be used in HS patients who are not clearly benefiting from them, according to the researchers.
The authors of both studies reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Patients with hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) may be misdiagnosed when they see providers who are not dermatologists – as is usually the case during the initial years of their disease, according to a large analysis of medical claims data.
The findings highlight the need for visual diagnostic aids and specific guidelines for treating HS that target nondermatologists, Melissa Butt, MPH, of Penn State Hershey (Pa.) Medical Center, said during an interview at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. She presented the findings during a poster session at the meeting.
HS is a chronic inflammatory disease of the hair follicles that affects 0.5%-4% of people in the United States. In past studies, up to 12 years elapsed between disease onset and diagnosis, in part because patients often cannot readily access dermatologists, Ms. Butt said. To better understand patterns of health care use during the years leading up to HS diagnosis, she and her colleagues used MarketScan data to identify 1,733 patients with HS-specific medical care claims filed in 2012 and 2013. Then they looked back at medical claims for these patients during 2008 through 2011, before the patients were diagnosed with HS. The cohort averaged 37 years of age (standard deviation, 15 years), and 73% were female.
Among 239,892 claims filed before patients were diagnosed with HS, 11,381 (4.7%) included codes for other diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissues, Ms. Butt said. Dermatologists filed only 31% of these skin-specific claims, while 69% were filed by other providers, such as family practitioners, internists, emergency department physicians, and acute care hospitalists.
Notably, about two-thirds of the skin-specific diagnostic codes could have represented a misdiagnosis of HS. These codes included conditions such as abscesses, carbuncles, local infections, ulcers, and diseases of the sebaceous glands.
The fact that 78% of visits occurred in offices and other outpatient settings further underscores the need to improve the detection and care of HS in these environments, Ms. Butt said. Given current national shortages of dermatologists, visual HS diagnostic aids and “detailed, multistep clinical practice guidelines” for nondermatologists could help improve care of HS while patients wait to see the specialists, she added.
A second poster presented at the meeting provided results of a study on the use and impact of antibiotics in the treatment of HS. Alexander Fischer of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and his associates studied antibiotic prescriptions and bacterial cultures from the lesions of 239 patients with HS who were treated at Johns Hopkins medical facilities between 2010 and 2015. Not only were 51% of HS patients on antibiotics at the time of culture, but these patients’ lesions were significantly more likely to contain antibiotic-resistant bacteria than were those of patients not on antibiotics.
Strikingly, Proteus species were isolated from nearly half of patients on trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX), and 88% of colonies were resistant to TMP/SMX, while only 13% of cultures from untreated patients grew Proteus (P less than .001) and all were TMP/SMX-susceptible (P less than .001). Likewise, 100% of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains from patients prescribed ciprofloxacin were resistant to it, compared with a 10% background rate of ciprofloxacin resistance among MRSA from patients not taking antibiotics (P = .04). In addition, the proportion of other S. aureus strains that were clindamycin-resistant was higher when patients were taking this antibiotic than when they were not (63% versus 17%; P = .03).
The results “raise questions” about whether antibiotics should be used in HS patients who are not clearly benefiting from them, according to the researchers.
The authors of both studies reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Patients with hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) may be misdiagnosed when they see providers who are not dermatologists – as is usually the case during the initial years of their disease, according to a large analysis of medical claims data.
The findings highlight the need for visual diagnostic aids and specific guidelines for treating HS that target nondermatologists, Melissa Butt, MPH, of Penn State Hershey (Pa.) Medical Center, said during an interview at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. She presented the findings during a poster session at the meeting.
HS is a chronic inflammatory disease of the hair follicles that affects 0.5%-4% of people in the United States. In past studies, up to 12 years elapsed between disease onset and diagnosis, in part because patients often cannot readily access dermatologists, Ms. Butt said. To better understand patterns of health care use during the years leading up to HS diagnosis, she and her colleagues used MarketScan data to identify 1,733 patients with HS-specific medical care claims filed in 2012 and 2013. Then they looked back at medical claims for these patients during 2008 through 2011, before the patients were diagnosed with HS. The cohort averaged 37 years of age (standard deviation, 15 years), and 73% were female.
Among 239,892 claims filed before patients were diagnosed with HS, 11,381 (4.7%) included codes for other diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissues, Ms. Butt said. Dermatologists filed only 31% of these skin-specific claims, while 69% were filed by other providers, such as family practitioners, internists, emergency department physicians, and acute care hospitalists.
Notably, about two-thirds of the skin-specific diagnostic codes could have represented a misdiagnosis of HS. These codes included conditions such as abscesses, carbuncles, local infections, ulcers, and diseases of the sebaceous glands.
The fact that 78% of visits occurred in offices and other outpatient settings further underscores the need to improve the detection and care of HS in these environments, Ms. Butt said. Given current national shortages of dermatologists, visual HS diagnostic aids and “detailed, multistep clinical practice guidelines” for nondermatologists could help improve care of HS while patients wait to see the specialists, she added.
A second poster presented at the meeting provided results of a study on the use and impact of antibiotics in the treatment of HS. Alexander Fischer of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and his associates studied antibiotic prescriptions and bacterial cultures from the lesions of 239 patients with HS who were treated at Johns Hopkins medical facilities between 2010 and 2015. Not only were 51% of HS patients on antibiotics at the time of culture, but these patients’ lesions were significantly more likely to contain antibiotic-resistant bacteria than were those of patients not on antibiotics.
Strikingly, Proteus species were isolated from nearly half of patients on trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX), and 88% of colonies were resistant to TMP/SMX, while only 13% of cultures from untreated patients grew Proteus (P less than .001) and all were TMP/SMX-susceptible (P less than .001). Likewise, 100% of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains from patients prescribed ciprofloxacin were resistant to it, compared with a 10% background rate of ciprofloxacin resistance among MRSA from patients not taking antibiotics (P = .04). In addition, the proportion of other S. aureus strains that were clindamycin-resistant was higher when patients were taking this antibiotic than when they were not (63% versus 17%; P = .03).
The results “raise questions” about whether antibiotics should be used in HS patients who are not clearly benefiting from them, according to the researchers.
The authors of both studies reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Key clinical point: Two studies underscored current challenges in diagnosing and treating hidradenitis suppurativa (HS).
Major finding: HS was usually diagnosed in outpatient settings by nondermatologists who often initially filed claims for carbuncles, ulcers, and other conditions that are confused with HS. In a separate study, antibiotic-resistant bacteria were significantly more prevalent in the lesions of HS patients who were receiving antibiotics than in patients who were not taking antibiotics.
Data source: A medical claims analysis of 1,733 patients with HS, and a study of antibiotic prescriptions and bacterial cultures from 239 patients with HS.
Disclosures: The authors of both studies reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
Serum Vitamin D Levels, Atopy Not Significantly Linked
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Serum vitamin D level was not significantly associated with atopic dermatitis or disease severity in a single-center study of more than 600 children and adolescents.
However, “we did observe a strong correlation between average serum vitamin D levels and skin type, as well as body mass index,” said Kavita Darji, a medical student at Saint Louis (Mo.) University, who presented the findings in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Those findings challenge the logic of following universal definitions of vitamin D deficiency, especially given the phenotypic heterogeneity of patients in the United States, she added in an interview.
Serum vitamin D testing is one of most common laboratory assays in this country, but clinicians still debate the risks and benefits of supplementing children and adolescents who test below the Endocrine Society’s threshold for sufficiency (30.0 ng/mL).
To identify factors affecting vitamin D levels, Ms. Darji and her associates reviewed electronic medical charts for patients under age 22 years at Saint Louis University medical centers between 2009 and 2014. The cohort of 655 patients was primarily white (64%) or black (29%), and was nearly equally balanced by gender; their average age was 10 years. The researchers analyzed only the first vitamin D serum measurement for each patient, and defined deficiency as a level under 20 ng/mL, insufficiency as a level between 20 and 29.9 ng/mL, and sufficiency as a level of at least 30 ng/mL.
Serum vitamin D levels were slightly lower among atopic patients, compared with those without atopy, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (about 25 ng/mL vs. about 38 ng/mL; P greater than .05). “We also did not find an association between AD severity and vitamin D level,” Ms. Darji reported. Instead, race and body mass index were the most significant predictors of vitamin D deficiency, probably because these factors directly affect cutaneous photo-induced vitamin D synthesis and the sequestration of fat-soluble vitamins in adipose tissue, she said.
Using the standard definitions, more than 50% of black patients were vitamin D deficient, while less than 30% had sufficient vitamin D levels. In contrast, about 25% of white patients were vitamin D deficient, while nearly 40% had sufficient vitamin D levels (P less than .0001 for proportions of deficiency by race). Furthermore, only about 10% of obese children (those who exceeded the 99th percentile of BMI for age) had sufficient vitamin D levels, compared with more than 40% of underweight children and about 30% of normal-weight children (P less than .00001).
Since vitamin D deficiency was more common among black and obese patients, “maybe they could benefit from a different cut-off value than the standard 30 ng per mL that we used,” Ms. Darji said. “The question is, do they really require these supplements? It may be beneficial to look at the unique characteristics of each patient before supplementing, because the risks of supplementation are considerable in terms of bone health and cardiovascular disease.”
Vitamin D levels did not vary significantly by gender or by month or season measured, Ms. Darji noted. She reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Serum vitamin D level was not significantly associated with atopic dermatitis or disease severity in a single-center study of more than 600 children and adolescents.
However, “we did observe a strong correlation between average serum vitamin D levels and skin type, as well as body mass index,” said Kavita Darji, a medical student at Saint Louis (Mo.) University, who presented the findings in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Those findings challenge the logic of following universal definitions of vitamin D deficiency, especially given the phenotypic heterogeneity of patients in the United States, she added in an interview.
Serum vitamin D testing is one of most common laboratory assays in this country, but clinicians still debate the risks and benefits of supplementing children and adolescents who test below the Endocrine Society’s threshold for sufficiency (30.0 ng/mL).
To identify factors affecting vitamin D levels, Ms. Darji and her associates reviewed electronic medical charts for patients under age 22 years at Saint Louis University medical centers between 2009 and 2014. The cohort of 655 patients was primarily white (64%) or black (29%), and was nearly equally balanced by gender; their average age was 10 years. The researchers analyzed only the first vitamin D serum measurement for each patient, and defined deficiency as a level under 20 ng/mL, insufficiency as a level between 20 and 29.9 ng/mL, and sufficiency as a level of at least 30 ng/mL.
Serum vitamin D levels were slightly lower among atopic patients, compared with those without atopy, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (about 25 ng/mL vs. about 38 ng/mL; P greater than .05). “We also did not find an association between AD severity and vitamin D level,” Ms. Darji reported. Instead, race and body mass index were the most significant predictors of vitamin D deficiency, probably because these factors directly affect cutaneous photo-induced vitamin D synthesis and the sequestration of fat-soluble vitamins in adipose tissue, she said.
Using the standard definitions, more than 50% of black patients were vitamin D deficient, while less than 30% had sufficient vitamin D levels. In contrast, about 25% of white patients were vitamin D deficient, while nearly 40% had sufficient vitamin D levels (P less than .0001 for proportions of deficiency by race). Furthermore, only about 10% of obese children (those who exceeded the 99th percentile of BMI for age) had sufficient vitamin D levels, compared with more than 40% of underweight children and about 30% of normal-weight children (P less than .00001).
Since vitamin D deficiency was more common among black and obese patients, “maybe they could benefit from a different cut-off value than the standard 30 ng per mL that we used,” Ms. Darji said. “The question is, do they really require these supplements? It may be beneficial to look at the unique characteristics of each patient before supplementing, because the risks of supplementation are considerable in terms of bone health and cardiovascular disease.”
Vitamin D levels did not vary significantly by gender or by month or season measured, Ms. Darji noted. She reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Serum vitamin D level was not significantly associated with atopic dermatitis or disease severity in a single-center study of more than 600 children and adolescents.
However, “we did observe a strong correlation between average serum vitamin D levels and skin type, as well as body mass index,” said Kavita Darji, a medical student at Saint Louis (Mo.) University, who presented the findings in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Those findings challenge the logic of following universal definitions of vitamin D deficiency, especially given the phenotypic heterogeneity of patients in the United States, she added in an interview.
Serum vitamin D testing is one of most common laboratory assays in this country, but clinicians still debate the risks and benefits of supplementing children and adolescents who test below the Endocrine Society’s threshold for sufficiency (30.0 ng/mL).
To identify factors affecting vitamin D levels, Ms. Darji and her associates reviewed electronic medical charts for patients under age 22 years at Saint Louis University medical centers between 2009 and 2014. The cohort of 655 patients was primarily white (64%) or black (29%), and was nearly equally balanced by gender; their average age was 10 years. The researchers analyzed only the first vitamin D serum measurement for each patient, and defined deficiency as a level under 20 ng/mL, insufficiency as a level between 20 and 29.9 ng/mL, and sufficiency as a level of at least 30 ng/mL.
Serum vitamin D levels were slightly lower among atopic patients, compared with those without atopy, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (about 25 ng/mL vs. about 38 ng/mL; P greater than .05). “We also did not find an association between AD severity and vitamin D level,” Ms. Darji reported. Instead, race and body mass index were the most significant predictors of vitamin D deficiency, probably because these factors directly affect cutaneous photo-induced vitamin D synthesis and the sequestration of fat-soluble vitamins in adipose tissue, she said.
Using the standard definitions, more than 50% of black patients were vitamin D deficient, while less than 30% had sufficient vitamin D levels. In contrast, about 25% of white patients were vitamin D deficient, while nearly 40% had sufficient vitamin D levels (P less than .0001 for proportions of deficiency by race). Furthermore, only about 10% of obese children (those who exceeded the 99th percentile of BMI for age) had sufficient vitamin D levels, compared with more than 40% of underweight children and about 30% of normal-weight children (P less than .00001).
Since vitamin D deficiency was more common among black and obese patients, “maybe they could benefit from a different cut-off value than the standard 30 ng per mL that we used,” Ms. Darji said. “The question is, do they really require these supplements? It may be beneficial to look at the unique characteristics of each patient before supplementing, because the risks of supplementation are considerable in terms of bone health and cardiovascular disease.”
Vitamin D levels did not vary significantly by gender or by month or season measured, Ms. Darji noted. She reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Serum vitamin D levels, atopy not significantly linked
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Serum vitamin D level was not significantly associated with atopic dermatitis or disease severity in a single-center study of more than 600 children and adolescents.
However, “we did observe a strong correlation between average serum vitamin D levels and skin type, as well as body mass index,” said Kavita Darji, a medical student at Saint Louis (Mo.) University, who presented the findings in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Those findings challenge the logic of following universal definitions of vitamin D deficiency, especially given the phenotypic heterogeneity of patients in the United States, she added in an interview.
Serum vitamin D testing is one of most common laboratory assays in this country, but clinicians still debate the risks and benefits of supplementing children and adolescents who test below the Endocrine Society’s threshold for sufficiency (30.0 ng/mL).
To identify factors affecting vitamin D levels, Ms. Darji and her associates reviewed electronic medical charts for patients under age 22 years at Saint Louis University medical centers between 2009 and 2014. The cohort of 655 patients was primarily white (64%) or black (29%), and was nearly equally balanced by gender; their average age was 10 years. The researchers analyzed only the first vitamin D serum measurement for each patient, and defined deficiency as a level under 20 ng/mL, insufficiency as a level between 20 and 29.9 ng/mL, and sufficiency as a level of at least 30 ng/mL.
Serum vitamin D levels were slightly lower among atopic patients, compared with those without atopy, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (about 25 ng/mL vs. about 38 ng/mL; P greater than .05). “We also did not find an association between AD severity and vitamin D level,” Ms. Darji reported. Instead, race and body mass index were the most significant predictors of vitamin D deficiency, probably because these factors directly affect cutaneous photo-induced vitamin D synthesis and the sequestration of fat-soluble vitamins in adipose tissue, she said.
Using the standard definitions, more than 50% of black patients were vitamin D deficient, while less than 30% had sufficient vitamin D levels. In contrast, about 25% of white patients were vitamin D deficient, while nearly 40% had sufficient vitamin D levels (P less than .0001 for proportions of deficiency by race). Furthermore, only about 10% of obese children (those who exceeded the 99th percentile of BMI for age) had sufficient vitamin D levels, compared with more than 40% of underweight children and about 30% of normal-weight children (P less than .00001).
Since vitamin D deficiency was more common among black and obese patients, “maybe they could benefit from a different cut-off value than the standard 30 ng per mL that we used,” Ms. Darji said. “The question is, do they really require these supplements? It may be beneficial to look at the unique characteristics of each patient before supplementing, because the risks of supplementation are considerable in terms of bone health and cardiovascular disease.”
Vitamin D levels did not vary significantly by gender or by month or season measured, Ms. Darji noted. She reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Serum vitamin D level was not significantly associated with atopic dermatitis or disease severity in a single-center study of more than 600 children and adolescents.
However, “we did observe a strong correlation between average serum vitamin D levels and skin type, as well as body mass index,” said Kavita Darji, a medical student at Saint Louis (Mo.) University, who presented the findings in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Those findings challenge the logic of following universal definitions of vitamin D deficiency, especially given the phenotypic heterogeneity of patients in the United States, she added in an interview.
Serum vitamin D testing is one of most common laboratory assays in this country, but clinicians still debate the risks and benefits of supplementing children and adolescents who test below the Endocrine Society’s threshold for sufficiency (30.0 ng/mL).
To identify factors affecting vitamin D levels, Ms. Darji and her associates reviewed electronic medical charts for patients under age 22 years at Saint Louis University medical centers between 2009 and 2014. The cohort of 655 patients was primarily white (64%) or black (29%), and was nearly equally balanced by gender; their average age was 10 years. The researchers analyzed only the first vitamin D serum measurement for each patient, and defined deficiency as a level under 20 ng/mL, insufficiency as a level between 20 and 29.9 ng/mL, and sufficiency as a level of at least 30 ng/mL.
Serum vitamin D levels were slightly lower among atopic patients, compared with those without atopy, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (about 25 ng/mL vs. about 38 ng/mL; P greater than .05). “We also did not find an association between AD severity and vitamin D level,” Ms. Darji reported. Instead, race and body mass index were the most significant predictors of vitamin D deficiency, probably because these factors directly affect cutaneous photo-induced vitamin D synthesis and the sequestration of fat-soluble vitamins in adipose tissue, she said.
Using the standard definitions, more than 50% of black patients were vitamin D deficient, while less than 30% had sufficient vitamin D levels. In contrast, about 25% of white patients were vitamin D deficient, while nearly 40% had sufficient vitamin D levels (P less than .0001 for proportions of deficiency by race). Furthermore, only about 10% of obese children (those who exceeded the 99th percentile of BMI for age) had sufficient vitamin D levels, compared with more than 40% of underweight children and about 30% of normal-weight children (P less than .00001).
Since vitamin D deficiency was more common among black and obese patients, “maybe they could benefit from a different cut-off value than the standard 30 ng per mL that we used,” Ms. Darji said. “The question is, do they really require these supplements? It may be beneficial to look at the unique characteristics of each patient before supplementing, because the risks of supplementation are considerable in terms of bone health and cardiovascular disease.”
Vitamin D levels did not vary significantly by gender or by month or season measured, Ms. Darji noted. She reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Serum vitamin D level was not significantly associated with atopic dermatitis or disease severity in a single-center study of more than 600 children and adolescents.
However, “we did observe a strong correlation between average serum vitamin D levels and skin type, as well as body mass index,” said Kavita Darji, a medical student at Saint Louis (Mo.) University, who presented the findings in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Those findings challenge the logic of following universal definitions of vitamin D deficiency, especially given the phenotypic heterogeneity of patients in the United States, she added in an interview.
Serum vitamin D testing is one of most common laboratory assays in this country, but clinicians still debate the risks and benefits of supplementing children and adolescents who test below the Endocrine Society’s threshold for sufficiency (30.0 ng/mL).
To identify factors affecting vitamin D levels, Ms. Darji and her associates reviewed electronic medical charts for patients under age 22 years at Saint Louis University medical centers between 2009 and 2014. The cohort of 655 patients was primarily white (64%) or black (29%), and was nearly equally balanced by gender; their average age was 10 years. The researchers analyzed only the first vitamin D serum measurement for each patient, and defined deficiency as a level under 20 ng/mL, insufficiency as a level between 20 and 29.9 ng/mL, and sufficiency as a level of at least 30 ng/mL.
Serum vitamin D levels were slightly lower among atopic patients, compared with those without atopy, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (about 25 ng/mL vs. about 38 ng/mL; P greater than .05). “We also did not find an association between AD severity and vitamin D level,” Ms. Darji reported. Instead, race and body mass index were the most significant predictors of vitamin D deficiency, probably because these factors directly affect cutaneous photo-induced vitamin D synthesis and the sequestration of fat-soluble vitamins in adipose tissue, she said.
Using the standard definitions, more than 50% of black patients were vitamin D deficient, while less than 30% had sufficient vitamin D levels. In contrast, about 25% of white patients were vitamin D deficient, while nearly 40% had sufficient vitamin D levels (P less than .0001 for proportions of deficiency by race). Furthermore, only about 10% of obese children (those who exceeded the 99th percentile of BMI for age) had sufficient vitamin D levels, compared with more than 40% of underweight children and about 30% of normal-weight children (P less than .00001).
Since vitamin D deficiency was more common among black and obese patients, “maybe they could benefit from a different cut-off value than the standard 30 ng per mL that we used,” Ms. Darji said. “The question is, do they really require these supplements? It may be beneficial to look at the unique characteristics of each patient before supplementing, because the risks of supplementation are considerable in terms of bone health and cardiovascular disease.”
Vitamin D levels did not vary significantly by gender or by month or season measured, Ms. Darji noted. She reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Key clinical point: Serum vitamin D was not a significant marker for pediatric atopic dermatitis or disease severity.
Major finding: The average serum vitamin D level was lower among patients with atopic dermatitis than healthy children, but the difference did not reach statistical significance.
Data source: A single-center retrospective review of electronic medical records from 655 patients aged 21 years and younger (average age, 10 years).
Disclosures: Ms. Darji reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
Study Links Severe Childhood Eczema to Sedentary Behaviors
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Children with severe atopic dermatitis were significantly more likely to log at least 5 hours of screen time a day, and were significantly less likely to exercise than were nonatopic controls, said the lead investigator of a large national study.
“Atopic dermatitis overall was not associated with sedentary behavior. It was severe disease only,” said Mark Strom of the department of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Patients tended to be even more sedentary if they suffered from disturbed sleep in addition to severe eczema, he added.
Heat and sweat worsen the intense itch of atopic dermatitis. Hypothesizing that this would deter affected children from physical activity, Mr. Strom and his associates analyzed data for 131,783 respondents aged 18 and under from the National Survey of Children’s Health. The survey assesses physical activity by asking how many days a week the respondent sweated and breathed hard for at least 20 minutes. Screen time is measured by asking about daily hours spent watching television and playing video games, and sleep quality is assessed by asking how many nights a week the child slept the normal amount for his or her age.
Simply having atopic dermatitis was linked with only a slight increase in the chance of having a sedentary lifestyle after controlling for demographic factors, insurance status, geographic location, and educational level, according to Mr. Strom. Specifically, eczema was significantly associated with a 12% lower odds of having exercised on at least 3 days of the previous week (odds ratio, 0.88). However, severe atopic dermatitis significantly reduced the odds that a child exercised at least one day a week by 61% (OR, 0.39). Furthermore, severe atopic dermatitis was associated with more than double the odds of having at least 5 hours of daily screen time (OR, 2.62). And having either moderate or severe eczema was tied to a significant decrease in the odds of having participated in sports in the past year, Mr. Strom said.
“Atopic dermatitis and sleep disturbance each contribute to sedentary behavior,” he reported. Nonatopic children who did not sleep enough on most nights had nearly double the odds of heavy television and video game use, compared with children who slept more, a significant difference. When poor sleepers also had atopic dermatitis, their odds of heavy screen use more than tripled. Poor sleepers were also significantly less likely to join sports teams, even when they did not have eczema, Mr. Strom said.
“Children with more severe atopic dermatitis may have more profound exacerbations of activity-related symptoms, which would lead to these findings,” he concluded. Future studies should explore whether better symptom control can help improve sedentary behaviors, he added.
The study was sponsored by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mr. Strom had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Children with severe atopic dermatitis were significantly more likely to log at least 5 hours of screen time a day, and were significantly less likely to exercise than were nonatopic controls, said the lead investigator of a large national study.
“Atopic dermatitis overall was not associated with sedentary behavior. It was severe disease only,” said Mark Strom of the department of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Patients tended to be even more sedentary if they suffered from disturbed sleep in addition to severe eczema, he added.
Heat and sweat worsen the intense itch of atopic dermatitis. Hypothesizing that this would deter affected children from physical activity, Mr. Strom and his associates analyzed data for 131,783 respondents aged 18 and under from the National Survey of Children’s Health. The survey assesses physical activity by asking how many days a week the respondent sweated and breathed hard for at least 20 minutes. Screen time is measured by asking about daily hours spent watching television and playing video games, and sleep quality is assessed by asking how many nights a week the child slept the normal amount for his or her age.
Simply having atopic dermatitis was linked with only a slight increase in the chance of having a sedentary lifestyle after controlling for demographic factors, insurance status, geographic location, and educational level, according to Mr. Strom. Specifically, eczema was significantly associated with a 12% lower odds of having exercised on at least 3 days of the previous week (odds ratio, 0.88). However, severe atopic dermatitis significantly reduced the odds that a child exercised at least one day a week by 61% (OR, 0.39). Furthermore, severe atopic dermatitis was associated with more than double the odds of having at least 5 hours of daily screen time (OR, 2.62). And having either moderate or severe eczema was tied to a significant decrease in the odds of having participated in sports in the past year, Mr. Strom said.
“Atopic dermatitis and sleep disturbance each contribute to sedentary behavior,” he reported. Nonatopic children who did not sleep enough on most nights had nearly double the odds of heavy television and video game use, compared with children who slept more, a significant difference. When poor sleepers also had atopic dermatitis, their odds of heavy screen use more than tripled. Poor sleepers were also significantly less likely to join sports teams, even when they did not have eczema, Mr. Strom said.
“Children with more severe atopic dermatitis may have more profound exacerbations of activity-related symptoms, which would lead to these findings,” he concluded. Future studies should explore whether better symptom control can help improve sedentary behaviors, he added.
The study was sponsored by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mr. Strom had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Children with severe atopic dermatitis were significantly more likely to log at least 5 hours of screen time a day, and were significantly less likely to exercise than were nonatopic controls, said the lead investigator of a large national study.
“Atopic dermatitis overall was not associated with sedentary behavior. It was severe disease only,” said Mark Strom of the department of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Patients tended to be even more sedentary if they suffered from disturbed sleep in addition to severe eczema, he added.
Heat and sweat worsen the intense itch of atopic dermatitis. Hypothesizing that this would deter affected children from physical activity, Mr. Strom and his associates analyzed data for 131,783 respondents aged 18 and under from the National Survey of Children’s Health. The survey assesses physical activity by asking how many days a week the respondent sweated and breathed hard for at least 20 minutes. Screen time is measured by asking about daily hours spent watching television and playing video games, and sleep quality is assessed by asking how many nights a week the child slept the normal amount for his or her age.
Simply having atopic dermatitis was linked with only a slight increase in the chance of having a sedentary lifestyle after controlling for demographic factors, insurance status, geographic location, and educational level, according to Mr. Strom. Specifically, eczema was significantly associated with a 12% lower odds of having exercised on at least 3 days of the previous week (odds ratio, 0.88). However, severe atopic dermatitis significantly reduced the odds that a child exercised at least one day a week by 61% (OR, 0.39). Furthermore, severe atopic dermatitis was associated with more than double the odds of having at least 5 hours of daily screen time (OR, 2.62). And having either moderate or severe eczema was tied to a significant decrease in the odds of having participated in sports in the past year, Mr. Strom said.
“Atopic dermatitis and sleep disturbance each contribute to sedentary behavior,” he reported. Nonatopic children who did not sleep enough on most nights had nearly double the odds of heavy television and video game use, compared with children who slept more, a significant difference. When poor sleepers also had atopic dermatitis, their odds of heavy screen use more than tripled. Poor sleepers were also significantly less likely to join sports teams, even when they did not have eczema, Mr. Strom said.
“Children with more severe atopic dermatitis may have more profound exacerbations of activity-related symptoms, which would lead to these findings,” he concluded. Future studies should explore whether better symptom control can help improve sedentary behaviors, he added.
The study was sponsored by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mr. Strom had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Study links severe childhood eczema to sedentary behaviors
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Children with severe atopic dermatitis were significantly more likely to log at least 5 hours of screen time a day, and were significantly less likely to exercise than were nonatopic controls, said the lead investigator of a large national study.
“Atopic dermatitis overall was not associated with sedentary behavior. It was severe disease only,” said Mark Strom of the department of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Patients tended to be even more sedentary if they suffered from disturbed sleep in addition to severe eczema, he added.
Heat and sweat worsen the intense itch of atopic dermatitis. Hypothesizing that this would deter affected children from physical activity, Mr. Strom and his associates analyzed data for 131,783 respondents aged 18 and under from the National Survey of Children’s Health. The survey assesses physical activity by asking how many days a week the respondent sweated and breathed hard for at least 20 minutes. Screen time is measured by asking about daily hours spent watching television and playing video games, and sleep quality is assessed by asking how many nights a week the child slept the normal amount for his or her age.
Simply having atopic dermatitis was linked with only a slight increase in the chance of having a sedentary lifestyle after controlling for demographic factors, insurance status, geographic location, and educational level, according to Mr. Strom. Specifically, eczema was significantly associated with a 12% lower odds of having exercised on at least 3 days of the previous week (odds ratio, 0.88). However, severe atopic dermatitis significantly reduced the odds that a child exercised at least one day a week by 61% (OR, 0.39). Furthermore, severe atopic dermatitis was associated with more than double the odds of having at least 5 hours of daily screen time (OR, 2.62). And having either moderate or severe eczema was tied to a significant decrease in the odds of having participated in sports in the past year, Mr. Strom said.
“Atopic dermatitis and sleep disturbance each contribute to sedentary behavior,” he reported. Nonatopic children who did not sleep enough on most nights had nearly double the odds of heavy television and video game use, compared with children who slept more, a significant difference. When poor sleepers also had atopic dermatitis, their odds of heavy screen use more than tripled. Poor sleepers were also significantly less likely to join sports teams, even when they did not have eczema, Mr. Strom said.
“Children with more severe atopic dermatitis may have more profound exacerbations of activity-related symptoms, which would lead to these findings,” he concluded. Future studies should explore whether better symptom control can help improve sedentary behaviors, he added.
The study was sponsored by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mr. Strom had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Children with severe atopic dermatitis were significantly more likely to log at least 5 hours of screen time a day, and were significantly less likely to exercise than were nonatopic controls, said the lead investigator of a large national study.
“Atopic dermatitis overall was not associated with sedentary behavior. It was severe disease only,” said Mark Strom of the department of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Patients tended to be even more sedentary if they suffered from disturbed sleep in addition to severe eczema, he added.
Heat and sweat worsen the intense itch of atopic dermatitis. Hypothesizing that this would deter affected children from physical activity, Mr. Strom and his associates analyzed data for 131,783 respondents aged 18 and under from the National Survey of Children’s Health. The survey assesses physical activity by asking how many days a week the respondent sweated and breathed hard for at least 20 minutes. Screen time is measured by asking about daily hours spent watching television and playing video games, and sleep quality is assessed by asking how many nights a week the child slept the normal amount for his or her age.
Simply having atopic dermatitis was linked with only a slight increase in the chance of having a sedentary lifestyle after controlling for demographic factors, insurance status, geographic location, and educational level, according to Mr. Strom. Specifically, eczema was significantly associated with a 12% lower odds of having exercised on at least 3 days of the previous week (odds ratio, 0.88). However, severe atopic dermatitis significantly reduced the odds that a child exercised at least one day a week by 61% (OR, 0.39). Furthermore, severe atopic dermatitis was associated with more than double the odds of having at least 5 hours of daily screen time (OR, 2.62). And having either moderate or severe eczema was tied to a significant decrease in the odds of having participated in sports in the past year, Mr. Strom said.
“Atopic dermatitis and sleep disturbance each contribute to sedentary behavior,” he reported. Nonatopic children who did not sleep enough on most nights had nearly double the odds of heavy television and video game use, compared with children who slept more, a significant difference. When poor sleepers also had atopic dermatitis, their odds of heavy screen use more than tripled. Poor sleepers were also significantly less likely to join sports teams, even when they did not have eczema, Mr. Strom said.
“Children with more severe atopic dermatitis may have more profound exacerbations of activity-related symptoms, which would lead to these findings,” he concluded. Future studies should explore whether better symptom control can help improve sedentary behaviors, he added.
The study was sponsored by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mr. Strom had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Children with severe atopic dermatitis were significantly more likely to log at least 5 hours of screen time a day, and were significantly less likely to exercise than were nonatopic controls, said the lead investigator of a large national study.
“Atopic dermatitis overall was not associated with sedentary behavior. It was severe disease only,” said Mark Strom of the department of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Patients tended to be even more sedentary if they suffered from disturbed sleep in addition to severe eczema, he added.
Heat and sweat worsen the intense itch of atopic dermatitis. Hypothesizing that this would deter affected children from physical activity, Mr. Strom and his associates analyzed data for 131,783 respondents aged 18 and under from the National Survey of Children’s Health. The survey assesses physical activity by asking how many days a week the respondent sweated and breathed hard for at least 20 minutes. Screen time is measured by asking about daily hours spent watching television and playing video games, and sleep quality is assessed by asking how many nights a week the child slept the normal amount for his or her age.
Simply having atopic dermatitis was linked with only a slight increase in the chance of having a sedentary lifestyle after controlling for demographic factors, insurance status, geographic location, and educational level, according to Mr. Strom. Specifically, eczema was significantly associated with a 12% lower odds of having exercised on at least 3 days of the previous week (odds ratio, 0.88). However, severe atopic dermatitis significantly reduced the odds that a child exercised at least one day a week by 61% (OR, 0.39). Furthermore, severe atopic dermatitis was associated with more than double the odds of having at least 5 hours of daily screen time (OR, 2.62). And having either moderate or severe eczema was tied to a significant decrease in the odds of having participated in sports in the past year, Mr. Strom said.
“Atopic dermatitis and sleep disturbance each contribute to sedentary behavior,” he reported. Nonatopic children who did not sleep enough on most nights had nearly double the odds of heavy television and video game use, compared with children who slept more, a significant difference. When poor sleepers also had atopic dermatitis, their odds of heavy screen use more than tripled. Poor sleepers were also significantly less likely to join sports teams, even when they did not have eczema, Mr. Strom said.
“Children with more severe atopic dermatitis may have more profound exacerbations of activity-related symptoms, which would lead to these findings,” he concluded. Future studies should explore whether better symptom control can help improve sedentary behaviors, he added.
The study was sponsored by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mr. Strom had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Key clinical point: A large national study linked severe atopic dermatitis to sedentary behaviors and screen time.
Major finding: Compared with children without eczema, those with severe disease were about 60% less likely to exercise at least once a week (OR, 0.39).
Data source: An analysis of data for 131,783 children from the National Survey of Children’s Health.
Disclosures: The study was sponsored by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mr. Strom had no disclosures.
Mobile phone messaging had little impact on missed dermatology visits
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Although cost-effective, a mobile phone appointment reminder service only minimally increased attendance rates at dermatology outpatient clinics, according to a large longitudinal study.
“There was a small, statistically significant increase in attendance at the adult dermatology clinic, but there was very little effect at satellite and specialty dermatology clinics,” said Dr. Noori Kim of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Baseline attendance rates were high, exceeding 80%, so perhaps mobile phone appointment reminders have little effect in that setting, she said. In addition, most reminders were by phone call, not text, which could have limited their efficacy if patients did not answer the phone or listen to their voicemail, Dr. Kim added during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
When patients miss medical appointments, it’s usually because they forget them. In this study, the first to assess mobile phone appointment reminders in dermatology, the investigators compared daily attendance at Johns Hopkins outpatient dermatology clinics before and after implementing an automated mobile phone appointment reminder system. The baseline time period without the service spanned four months in 2014, while the comparison period with the system covered the same four-month period a year later.
Patients kept 90% of 11,455 dermatology appointments scheduled during the pre-service period. A year later, the attendance rate was nearly identical, at 89%. Likewise, there were no statistically significant changes in attendance at Johns Hopkins specialty, satellite, pediatric dermatology, and pediatric laser clinics.
In contrast, attendance at the adult dermatology clinic rose by about three percentage points after the service was implemented, from 81% (2,530 visits attended of 3,141 scheduled) to 84% (2,965 visits attended of 3,533 scheduled), and the difference was statistically significant.
“About 88% of reminders were answered across sites, with little variance. The cost was about $5,500 for a 17-month period,” Dr. Kim said. She noted that 71% of patients opted into the service at the adult clinic with the increased attendance rate, compared with about 30% of patients at the other clinics that showed no statistically significant increase in attendance rates.
The “strong continuity already present between patients and providers” and high baseline attendance rates might have limited any effects of mobile phone messaging at these other clinics, she said. Attendance rates also did not change significantly at three Johns Hopkins dermatology clinics that never implemented mobile phone reminders, she noted.
Dr. Kim reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Although cost-effective, a mobile phone appointment reminder service only minimally increased attendance rates at dermatology outpatient clinics, according to a large longitudinal study.
“There was a small, statistically significant increase in attendance at the adult dermatology clinic, but there was very little effect at satellite and specialty dermatology clinics,” said Dr. Noori Kim of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Baseline attendance rates were high, exceeding 80%, so perhaps mobile phone appointment reminders have little effect in that setting, she said. In addition, most reminders were by phone call, not text, which could have limited their efficacy if patients did not answer the phone or listen to their voicemail, Dr. Kim added during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
When patients miss medical appointments, it’s usually because they forget them. In this study, the first to assess mobile phone appointment reminders in dermatology, the investigators compared daily attendance at Johns Hopkins outpatient dermatology clinics before and after implementing an automated mobile phone appointment reminder system. The baseline time period without the service spanned four months in 2014, while the comparison period with the system covered the same four-month period a year later.
Patients kept 90% of 11,455 dermatology appointments scheduled during the pre-service period. A year later, the attendance rate was nearly identical, at 89%. Likewise, there were no statistically significant changes in attendance at Johns Hopkins specialty, satellite, pediatric dermatology, and pediatric laser clinics.
In contrast, attendance at the adult dermatology clinic rose by about three percentage points after the service was implemented, from 81% (2,530 visits attended of 3,141 scheduled) to 84% (2,965 visits attended of 3,533 scheduled), and the difference was statistically significant.
“About 88% of reminders were answered across sites, with little variance. The cost was about $5,500 for a 17-month period,” Dr. Kim said. She noted that 71% of patients opted into the service at the adult clinic with the increased attendance rate, compared with about 30% of patients at the other clinics that showed no statistically significant increase in attendance rates.
The “strong continuity already present between patients and providers” and high baseline attendance rates might have limited any effects of mobile phone messaging at these other clinics, she said. Attendance rates also did not change significantly at three Johns Hopkins dermatology clinics that never implemented mobile phone reminders, she noted.
Dr. Kim reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Although cost-effective, a mobile phone appointment reminder service only minimally increased attendance rates at dermatology outpatient clinics, according to a large longitudinal study.
“There was a small, statistically significant increase in attendance at the adult dermatology clinic, but there was very little effect at satellite and specialty dermatology clinics,” said Dr. Noori Kim of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Baseline attendance rates were high, exceeding 80%, so perhaps mobile phone appointment reminders have little effect in that setting, she said. In addition, most reminders were by phone call, not text, which could have limited their efficacy if patients did not answer the phone or listen to their voicemail, Dr. Kim added during an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
When patients miss medical appointments, it’s usually because they forget them. In this study, the first to assess mobile phone appointment reminders in dermatology, the investigators compared daily attendance at Johns Hopkins outpatient dermatology clinics before and after implementing an automated mobile phone appointment reminder system. The baseline time period without the service spanned four months in 2014, while the comparison period with the system covered the same four-month period a year later.
Patients kept 90% of 11,455 dermatology appointments scheduled during the pre-service period. A year later, the attendance rate was nearly identical, at 89%. Likewise, there were no statistically significant changes in attendance at Johns Hopkins specialty, satellite, pediatric dermatology, and pediatric laser clinics.
In contrast, attendance at the adult dermatology clinic rose by about three percentage points after the service was implemented, from 81% (2,530 visits attended of 3,141 scheduled) to 84% (2,965 visits attended of 3,533 scheduled), and the difference was statistically significant.
“About 88% of reminders were answered across sites, with little variance. The cost was about $5,500 for a 17-month period,” Dr. Kim said. She noted that 71% of patients opted into the service at the adult clinic with the increased attendance rate, compared with about 30% of patients at the other clinics that showed no statistically significant increase in attendance rates.
The “strong continuity already present between patients and providers” and high baseline attendance rates might have limited any effects of mobile phone messaging at these other clinics, she said. Attendance rates also did not change significantly at three Johns Hopkins dermatology clinics that never implemented mobile phone reminders, she noted.
Dr. Kim reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Key clinical point: A mobile phone messaging appointment reminder service had little effect on attendance rates at outpatient dermatology clinics.
Major finding: Attendance rates did not change overall or at most individual clinics, although attendance at the general adult dermatology clinic rose significantly by three percentage points.
Data source: A retrospective study of attendance rates at Johns Hopkins outpatient dermatology clinics before and after implementation of the messaging service.
Disclosures: Dr. Kim reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.
Study tracks distant metastatic patterns of Merkel cell carcinoma
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Distant metastatic sites of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involved the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac lymph nodes, in a single center retrospective study of 305 patients.
Merkel cell carcinoma metastases “clearly favored distant nodes, but the distribution of other metastatic sites was distinct from other cancers, such as melanoma,” Jamiluddin Qazi, an undergraduate student at the University of Washington, Seattle, said at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. The findings could help guide imaging and other surveillance of patients after they develop a primary Merkel cell tumor, he added.
About 2,000 individuals in the United States are diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma every year. About 40% of these patients develop metastatic disease, which has a 5-year survival rate of less than 25%, Mr. Qazi noted. Indeed, median survival after diagnosis of metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma was only 9.5 months in one recent study (J Cutan Pathol. 2010;37:20-7). Programmed death 1 (PD-1) blockade with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) can potentially improve survival (N Engl J Med. 2016; 374:2542-52), “but there is no consensus regarding follow-up for Merkel cell carcinoma. The 2016 National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines recommend ‘follow up as clinically indicated,’ and a lack of data has led to ambiguity,” Mr. Qazi said.
Working with oncologists and radiologists at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, he analyzed a tissue and clinical database of 442 initial distant Merkel cell carcinoma metastases among 305 patients. Initial distant metastases were defined as the first lesions detected beyond the regional lymph nodes of the primary tumor. A total of 69% of patients had one initial distant metastasis, 19% had two concurrently identified lesions, 9% had three lesions, and 4% had at least four lesions, Mr. Qazi reported.
“Merkel cell carcinoma seemed to metastasize to unusual places, but clearly preferred the distant lymph nodes. In all, 26% of metastases localized there, most commonly to the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac nodes,” he said. The next most common site of distant metastasis was the liver (15% of lesions), followed by the skin and bone (13% of lesions each), lung (6%), and pancreas (5%). Less common sites included the heart, spleen, abdominal muscle, brain, kidneys, adrenal glands, gonad, chest wall, and stomach.
Comparing these findings with a similar study in melanoma (J Oncol 2012. doi: 10.1155/2012/647684) showed that both cancers have about the same chances of metastasizing to the liver, bone, kidneys, adrenal glands, and stomach, Mr. Qazi said. However, Merkel cell carcinoma was less likely to metastasize to the brain (3% of lesions, vs. 12% for melanoma) and lung (6% vs. 14%), and was more likely to metastasize to the pancreas (5% vs. 1%).
Now the investigators are working to link metastatic sites with factors such as the location of the primary tumor, the presence or absence of lymphovascular invasion, and the status of the immune system and Merkel polyomavirus infection, said Mr. Qazi. They also are analyzing time from diagnosis or treatment to metastasis to help guide decisions about when to order follow-up imaging. Ultimately, they hope to create an online tool that enables clinicians to describe a primary Merkel cell carcinoma and rapidly receive automated information about the most likely timing and location of metastasis.
The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Distant metastatic sites of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involved the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac lymph nodes, in a single center retrospective study of 305 patients.
Merkel cell carcinoma metastases “clearly favored distant nodes, but the distribution of other metastatic sites was distinct from other cancers, such as melanoma,” Jamiluddin Qazi, an undergraduate student at the University of Washington, Seattle, said at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. The findings could help guide imaging and other surveillance of patients after they develop a primary Merkel cell tumor, he added.
About 2,000 individuals in the United States are diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma every year. About 40% of these patients develop metastatic disease, which has a 5-year survival rate of less than 25%, Mr. Qazi noted. Indeed, median survival after diagnosis of metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma was only 9.5 months in one recent study (J Cutan Pathol. 2010;37:20-7). Programmed death 1 (PD-1) blockade with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) can potentially improve survival (N Engl J Med. 2016; 374:2542-52), “but there is no consensus regarding follow-up for Merkel cell carcinoma. The 2016 National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines recommend ‘follow up as clinically indicated,’ and a lack of data has led to ambiguity,” Mr. Qazi said.
Working with oncologists and radiologists at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, he analyzed a tissue and clinical database of 442 initial distant Merkel cell carcinoma metastases among 305 patients. Initial distant metastases were defined as the first lesions detected beyond the regional lymph nodes of the primary tumor. A total of 69% of patients had one initial distant metastasis, 19% had two concurrently identified lesions, 9% had three lesions, and 4% had at least four lesions, Mr. Qazi reported.
“Merkel cell carcinoma seemed to metastasize to unusual places, but clearly preferred the distant lymph nodes. In all, 26% of metastases localized there, most commonly to the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac nodes,” he said. The next most common site of distant metastasis was the liver (15% of lesions), followed by the skin and bone (13% of lesions each), lung (6%), and pancreas (5%). Less common sites included the heart, spleen, abdominal muscle, brain, kidneys, adrenal glands, gonad, chest wall, and stomach.
Comparing these findings with a similar study in melanoma (J Oncol 2012. doi: 10.1155/2012/647684) showed that both cancers have about the same chances of metastasizing to the liver, bone, kidneys, adrenal glands, and stomach, Mr. Qazi said. However, Merkel cell carcinoma was less likely to metastasize to the brain (3% of lesions, vs. 12% for melanoma) and lung (6% vs. 14%), and was more likely to metastasize to the pancreas (5% vs. 1%).
Now the investigators are working to link metastatic sites with factors such as the location of the primary tumor, the presence or absence of lymphovascular invasion, and the status of the immune system and Merkel polyomavirus infection, said Mr. Qazi. They also are analyzing time from diagnosis or treatment to metastasis to help guide decisions about when to order follow-up imaging. Ultimately, they hope to create an online tool that enables clinicians to describe a primary Merkel cell carcinoma and rapidly receive automated information about the most likely timing and location of metastasis.
The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Distant metastatic sites of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involved the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac lymph nodes, in a single center retrospective study of 305 patients.
Merkel cell carcinoma metastases “clearly favored distant nodes, but the distribution of other metastatic sites was distinct from other cancers, such as melanoma,” Jamiluddin Qazi, an undergraduate student at the University of Washington, Seattle, said at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. The findings could help guide imaging and other surveillance of patients after they develop a primary Merkel cell tumor, he added.
About 2,000 individuals in the United States are diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma every year. About 40% of these patients develop metastatic disease, which has a 5-year survival rate of less than 25%, Mr. Qazi noted. Indeed, median survival after diagnosis of metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma was only 9.5 months in one recent study (J Cutan Pathol. 2010;37:20-7). Programmed death 1 (PD-1) blockade with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) can potentially improve survival (N Engl J Med. 2016; 374:2542-52), “but there is no consensus regarding follow-up for Merkel cell carcinoma. The 2016 National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines recommend ‘follow up as clinically indicated,’ and a lack of data has led to ambiguity,” Mr. Qazi said.
Working with oncologists and radiologists at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, he analyzed a tissue and clinical database of 442 initial distant Merkel cell carcinoma metastases among 305 patients. Initial distant metastases were defined as the first lesions detected beyond the regional lymph nodes of the primary tumor. A total of 69% of patients had one initial distant metastasis, 19% had two concurrently identified lesions, 9% had three lesions, and 4% had at least four lesions, Mr. Qazi reported.
“Merkel cell carcinoma seemed to metastasize to unusual places, but clearly preferred the distant lymph nodes. In all, 26% of metastases localized there, most commonly to the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac nodes,” he said. The next most common site of distant metastasis was the liver (15% of lesions), followed by the skin and bone (13% of lesions each), lung (6%), and pancreas (5%). Less common sites included the heart, spleen, abdominal muscle, brain, kidneys, adrenal glands, gonad, chest wall, and stomach.
Comparing these findings with a similar study in melanoma (J Oncol 2012. doi: 10.1155/2012/647684) showed that both cancers have about the same chances of metastasizing to the liver, bone, kidneys, adrenal glands, and stomach, Mr. Qazi said. However, Merkel cell carcinoma was less likely to metastasize to the brain (3% of lesions, vs. 12% for melanoma) and lung (6% vs. 14%), and was more likely to metastasize to the pancreas (5% vs. 1%).
Now the investigators are working to link metastatic sites with factors such as the location of the primary tumor, the presence or absence of lymphovascular invasion, and the status of the immune system and Merkel polyomavirus infection, said Mr. Qazi. They also are analyzing time from diagnosis or treatment to metastasis to help guide decisions about when to order follow-up imaging. Ultimately, they hope to create an online tool that enables clinicians to describe a primary Merkel cell carcinoma and rapidly receive automated information about the most likely timing and location of metastasis.
The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Key clinical point: Distant metastases of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involve the lymph nodes, followed by the liver, skin, and bone.
Major finding: Distant lymph node metastases comprised 26% of lesions, the liver comprised 15%, and skin and bone made up 13% each.
Data source: A single-center retrospective study of 442 initial distant metastases of Merkel cell carcinoma among 305 patients.
Disclosures: The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
Study tracks distant metastatic patterns of Merkel cell carcinoma
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Distant metastatic sites of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involved the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac lymph nodes, in a single center retrospective study of 305 patients.
Merkel cell carcinoma metastases “clearly favored distant nodes, but the distribution of other metastatic sites was distinct from other cancers, such as melanoma,” Jamiluddin Qazi, an undergraduate student at the University of Washington, Seattle, said at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. The findings could help guide imaging and other surveillance of patients after they develop a primary Merkel cell tumor, he added.
About 2,000 individuals in the United States are diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma every year. About 40% of these patients develop metastatic disease, which has a 5-year survival rate of less than 25%, Mr. Qazi noted. Indeed, median survival after diagnosis of metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma was only 9.5 months in one recent study (J Cutan Pathol. 2010;37:20-7). Programmed death 1 (PD-1) blockade with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) can potentially improve survival (N Engl J Med. 2016; 374:2542-52), “but there is no consensus regarding follow-up for Merkel cell carcinoma. The 2016 National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines recommend ‘follow up as clinically indicated,’ and a lack of data has led to ambiguity,” Mr. Qazi said.
Working with oncologists and radiologists at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, he analyzed a tissue and clinical database of 442 initial distant Merkel cell carcinoma metastases among 305 patients. Initial distant metastases were defined as the first lesions detected beyond the regional lymph nodes of the primary tumor. A total of 69% of patients had one initial distant metastasis, 19% had two concurrently identified lesions, 9% had three lesions, and 4% had at least four lesions, Mr. Qazi reported.
“Merkel cell carcinoma seemed to metastasize to unusual places, but clearly preferred the distant lymph nodes. In all, 26% of metastases localized there, most commonly to the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac nodes,” he said. The next most common site of distant metastasis was the liver (15% of lesions), followed by the skin and bone (13% of lesions each), lung (6%), and pancreas (5%). Less common sites included the heart, spleen, abdominal muscle, brain, kidneys, adrenal glands, gonad, chest wall, and stomach.
Comparing these findings with a similar study in melanoma (J Oncol 2012. doi: 10.1155/2012/647684) showed that both cancers have about the same chances of metastasizing to the liver, bone, kidneys, adrenal glands, and stomach, Mr. Qazi said. However, Merkel cell carcinoma was less likely to metastasize to the brain (3% of lesions, vs. 12% for melanoma) and lung (6% vs. 14%), and was more likely to metastasize to the pancreas (5% vs. 1%).
Now the investigators are working to link metastatic sites with factors such as the location of the primary tumor, the presence or absence of lymphovascular invasion, and the status of the immune system and Merkel polyomavirus infection, said Mr. Qazi. They also are analyzing time from diagnosis or treatment to metastasis to help guide decisions about when to order follow-up imaging. Ultimately, they hope to create an online tool that enables clinicians to describe a primary Merkel cell carcinoma and rapidly receive automated information about the most likely timing and location of metastasis.
The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Distant metastatic sites of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involved the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac lymph nodes, in a single center retrospective study of 305 patients.
Merkel cell carcinoma metastases “clearly favored distant nodes, but the distribution of other metastatic sites was distinct from other cancers, such as melanoma,” Jamiluddin Qazi, an undergraduate student at the University of Washington, Seattle, said at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. The findings could help guide imaging and other surveillance of patients after they develop a primary Merkel cell tumor, he added.
About 2,000 individuals in the United States are diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma every year. About 40% of these patients develop metastatic disease, which has a 5-year survival rate of less than 25%, Mr. Qazi noted. Indeed, median survival after diagnosis of metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma was only 9.5 months in one recent study (J Cutan Pathol. 2010;37:20-7). Programmed death 1 (PD-1) blockade with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) can potentially improve survival (N Engl J Med. 2016; 374:2542-52), “but there is no consensus regarding follow-up for Merkel cell carcinoma. The 2016 National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines recommend ‘follow up as clinically indicated,’ and a lack of data has led to ambiguity,” Mr. Qazi said.
Working with oncologists and radiologists at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, he analyzed a tissue and clinical database of 442 initial distant Merkel cell carcinoma metastases among 305 patients. Initial distant metastases were defined as the first lesions detected beyond the regional lymph nodes of the primary tumor. A total of 69% of patients had one initial distant metastasis, 19% had two concurrently identified lesions, 9% had three lesions, and 4% had at least four lesions, Mr. Qazi reported.
“Merkel cell carcinoma seemed to metastasize to unusual places, but clearly preferred the distant lymph nodes. In all, 26% of metastases localized there, most commonly to the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac nodes,” he said. The next most common site of distant metastasis was the liver (15% of lesions), followed by the skin and bone (13% of lesions each), lung (6%), and pancreas (5%). Less common sites included the heart, spleen, abdominal muscle, brain, kidneys, adrenal glands, gonad, chest wall, and stomach.
Comparing these findings with a similar study in melanoma (J Oncol 2012. doi: 10.1155/2012/647684) showed that both cancers have about the same chances of metastasizing to the liver, bone, kidneys, adrenal glands, and stomach, Mr. Qazi said. However, Merkel cell carcinoma was less likely to metastasize to the brain (3% of lesions, vs. 12% for melanoma) and lung (6% vs. 14%), and was more likely to metastasize to the pancreas (5% vs. 1%).
Now the investigators are working to link metastatic sites with factors such as the location of the primary tumor, the presence or absence of lymphovascular invasion, and the status of the immune system and Merkel polyomavirus infection, said Mr. Qazi. They also are analyzing time from diagnosis or treatment to metastasis to help guide decisions about when to order follow-up imaging. Ultimately, they hope to create an online tool that enables clinicians to describe a primary Merkel cell carcinoma and rapidly receive automated information about the most likely timing and location of metastasis.
The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – Distant metastatic sites of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involved the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac lymph nodes, in a single center retrospective study of 305 patients.
Merkel cell carcinoma metastases “clearly favored distant nodes, but the distribution of other metastatic sites was distinct from other cancers, such as melanoma,” Jamiluddin Qazi, an undergraduate student at the University of Washington, Seattle, said at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. The findings could help guide imaging and other surveillance of patients after they develop a primary Merkel cell tumor, he added.
About 2,000 individuals in the United States are diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma every year. About 40% of these patients develop metastatic disease, which has a 5-year survival rate of less than 25%, Mr. Qazi noted. Indeed, median survival after diagnosis of metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma was only 9.5 months in one recent study (J Cutan Pathol. 2010;37:20-7). Programmed death 1 (PD-1) blockade with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) can potentially improve survival (N Engl J Med. 2016; 374:2542-52), “but there is no consensus regarding follow-up for Merkel cell carcinoma. The 2016 National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines recommend ‘follow up as clinically indicated,’ and a lack of data has led to ambiguity,” Mr. Qazi said.
Working with oncologists and radiologists at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, he analyzed a tissue and clinical database of 442 initial distant Merkel cell carcinoma metastases among 305 patients. Initial distant metastases were defined as the first lesions detected beyond the regional lymph nodes of the primary tumor. A total of 69% of patients had one initial distant metastasis, 19% had two concurrently identified lesions, 9% had three lesions, and 4% had at least four lesions, Mr. Qazi reported.
“Merkel cell carcinoma seemed to metastasize to unusual places, but clearly preferred the distant lymph nodes. In all, 26% of metastases localized there, most commonly to the supraclavicular, retroperitoneal, and iliac nodes,” he said. The next most common site of distant metastasis was the liver (15% of lesions), followed by the skin and bone (13% of lesions each), lung (6%), and pancreas (5%). Less common sites included the heart, spleen, abdominal muscle, brain, kidneys, adrenal glands, gonad, chest wall, and stomach.
Comparing these findings with a similar study in melanoma (J Oncol 2012. doi: 10.1155/2012/647684) showed that both cancers have about the same chances of metastasizing to the liver, bone, kidneys, adrenal glands, and stomach, Mr. Qazi said. However, Merkel cell carcinoma was less likely to metastasize to the brain (3% of lesions, vs. 12% for melanoma) and lung (6% vs. 14%), and was more likely to metastasize to the pancreas (5% vs. 1%).
Now the investigators are working to link metastatic sites with factors such as the location of the primary tumor, the presence or absence of lymphovascular invasion, and the status of the immune system and Merkel polyomavirus infection, said Mr. Qazi. They also are analyzing time from diagnosis or treatment to metastasis to help guide decisions about when to order follow-up imaging. Ultimately, they hope to create an online tool that enables clinicians to describe a primary Merkel cell carcinoma and rapidly receive automated information about the most likely timing and location of metastasis.
The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Key clinical point: Distant metastases of Merkel cell carcinoma most often involve the lymph nodes, followed by the liver, skin, and bone.
Major finding: Distant lymph node metastases comprised 26% of lesions, the liver comprised 15%, and skin and bone made up 13% each.
Data source: A single-center retrospective study of 442 initial distant metastases of Merkel cell carcinoma among 305 patients.
Disclosures: The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Mr. Qazi had no conflicts of interest.
Nonwhite Race, Lower Socioeconomic Status Predicts Persistently Active AD
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. –Among patients with atopic dermatitis, persistently active disease was significantly more common among females of nonwhite race with a history of atopy than among patients without these characteristics, in an analysis of survey data from the Pediatric Elective Eczema Registry.
Annual household income under $50,000 also was a significant predictor of persistently active eczema, according to Katrina Abuabara, MD, of the department of dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, and her associates, who reported their results in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
Atopic dermatitis often persists into adulthood, but few studies have explored contributors to poor disease control. To help fill that gap, the investigators analyzed 65,237 surveys from the Pediatric Eczema Elective Registry (PEER), which tracks children and young adults aged 2-26 years with physician-diagnosed atopic dermatitis. The average age of the 6,237 patients was 7 years at enrollment (standard deviation, 4 years). They were followed at 6-month intervals for up to 10 years, with an average of about 10 surveys per respondent (standard deviation, 6.3 surveys).
In all, 4,607 patients (74% of the cohort) returned surveys spanning early childhood through their mid-20s. Only 15% of patients had “resolving” disease, meaning that as they aged, they increasingly reported complete disease control for periods of 6 months and longer.
The remaining 85% of patients had persistently active disease. In this group, 54% were female, 77% had a household income under $50,000 per year, 71% were nonwhite, and 75% had a history of atopy. Each of these characteristics significantly increased the odds of persistently active atopic dermatitis in the multivariable model (P less than .05 for each association).
Nonwhite race and history of atopy were the strongest predictors of persistently active disease – each lowered the odds of complete disease control by almost 50% (odds ratio, 0.53). Furthermore, females had 37% lower odds of complete disease control compared with males (OR, 0.63), and individuals with household income under $50,000 had 16% lower odds of complete disease control compared with those with higher annual incomes (OR, 0.84).
The link between lower socioeconomic status and persistently active eczema belies previous findings, the researchers noted. Those studies found that individuals of higher socioeconomic status were at greater risk for developing atopic dermatitis, but “failed to account for the chronic nature of the disease. In contrast, our results suggest that atopic dermatitis persistence may be associated with lower income and nonwhite race, and highlight the importance of longitudinal studies that permit analysis of mechanisms of disease control over time.”
Dr. Abuabara received a grant from the Clinical & Translational Science Institute of UCSF. She had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. –Among patients with atopic dermatitis, persistently active disease was significantly more common among females of nonwhite race with a history of atopy than among patients without these characteristics, in an analysis of survey data from the Pediatric Elective Eczema Registry.
Annual household income under $50,000 also was a significant predictor of persistently active eczema, according to Katrina Abuabara, MD, of the department of dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, and her associates, who reported their results in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
Atopic dermatitis often persists into adulthood, but few studies have explored contributors to poor disease control. To help fill that gap, the investigators analyzed 65,237 surveys from the Pediatric Eczema Elective Registry (PEER), which tracks children and young adults aged 2-26 years with physician-diagnosed atopic dermatitis. The average age of the 6,237 patients was 7 years at enrollment (standard deviation, 4 years). They were followed at 6-month intervals for up to 10 years, with an average of about 10 surveys per respondent (standard deviation, 6.3 surveys).
In all, 4,607 patients (74% of the cohort) returned surveys spanning early childhood through their mid-20s. Only 15% of patients had “resolving” disease, meaning that as they aged, they increasingly reported complete disease control for periods of 6 months and longer.
The remaining 85% of patients had persistently active disease. In this group, 54% were female, 77% had a household income under $50,000 per year, 71% were nonwhite, and 75% had a history of atopy. Each of these characteristics significantly increased the odds of persistently active atopic dermatitis in the multivariable model (P less than .05 for each association).
Nonwhite race and history of atopy were the strongest predictors of persistently active disease – each lowered the odds of complete disease control by almost 50% (odds ratio, 0.53). Furthermore, females had 37% lower odds of complete disease control compared with males (OR, 0.63), and individuals with household income under $50,000 had 16% lower odds of complete disease control compared with those with higher annual incomes (OR, 0.84).
The link between lower socioeconomic status and persistently active eczema belies previous findings, the researchers noted. Those studies found that individuals of higher socioeconomic status were at greater risk for developing atopic dermatitis, but “failed to account for the chronic nature of the disease. In contrast, our results suggest that atopic dermatitis persistence may be associated with lower income and nonwhite race, and highlight the importance of longitudinal studies that permit analysis of mechanisms of disease control over time.”
Dr. Abuabara received a grant from the Clinical & Translational Science Institute of UCSF. She had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. –Among patients with atopic dermatitis, persistently active disease was significantly more common among females of nonwhite race with a history of atopy than among patients without these characteristics, in an analysis of survey data from the Pediatric Elective Eczema Registry.
Annual household income under $50,000 also was a significant predictor of persistently active eczema, according to Katrina Abuabara, MD, of the department of dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, and her associates, who reported their results in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
Atopic dermatitis often persists into adulthood, but few studies have explored contributors to poor disease control. To help fill that gap, the investigators analyzed 65,237 surveys from the Pediatric Eczema Elective Registry (PEER), which tracks children and young adults aged 2-26 years with physician-diagnosed atopic dermatitis. The average age of the 6,237 patients was 7 years at enrollment (standard deviation, 4 years). They were followed at 6-month intervals for up to 10 years, with an average of about 10 surveys per respondent (standard deviation, 6.3 surveys).
In all, 4,607 patients (74% of the cohort) returned surveys spanning early childhood through their mid-20s. Only 15% of patients had “resolving” disease, meaning that as they aged, they increasingly reported complete disease control for periods of 6 months and longer.
The remaining 85% of patients had persistently active disease. In this group, 54% were female, 77% had a household income under $50,000 per year, 71% were nonwhite, and 75% had a history of atopy. Each of these characteristics significantly increased the odds of persistently active atopic dermatitis in the multivariable model (P less than .05 for each association).
Nonwhite race and history of atopy were the strongest predictors of persistently active disease – each lowered the odds of complete disease control by almost 50% (odds ratio, 0.53). Furthermore, females had 37% lower odds of complete disease control compared with males (OR, 0.63), and individuals with household income under $50,000 had 16% lower odds of complete disease control compared with those with higher annual incomes (OR, 0.84).
The link between lower socioeconomic status and persistently active eczema belies previous findings, the researchers noted. Those studies found that individuals of higher socioeconomic status were at greater risk for developing atopic dermatitis, but “failed to account for the chronic nature of the disease. In contrast, our results suggest that atopic dermatitis persistence may be associated with lower income and nonwhite race, and highlight the importance of longitudinal studies that permit analysis of mechanisms of disease control over time.”
Dr. Abuabara received a grant from the Clinical & Translational Science Institute of UCSF. She had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Nonwhite race, lower socioeconomic status predicts persistently active AD
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. –Among patients with atopic dermatitis, persistently active disease was significantly more common among females of nonwhite race with a history of atopy than among patients without these characteristics, in an analysis of survey data from the Pediatric Elective Eczema Registry.
Annual household income under $50,000 also was a significant predictor of persistently active eczema, according to Katrina Abuabara, MD, of the department of dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, and her associates, who reported their results in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
Atopic dermatitis often persists into adulthood, but few studies have explored contributors to poor disease control. To help fill that gap, the investigators analyzed 65,237 surveys from the Pediatric Eczema Elective Registry (PEER), which tracks children and young adults aged 2-26 years with physician-diagnosed atopic dermatitis. The average age of the 6,237 patients was 7 years at enrollment (standard deviation, 4 years). They were followed at 6-month intervals for up to 10 years, with an average of about 10 surveys per respondent (standard deviation, 6.3 surveys).
In all, 4,607 patients (74% of the cohort) returned surveys spanning early childhood through their mid-20s. Only 15% of patients had “resolving” disease, meaning that as they aged, they increasingly reported complete disease control for periods of 6 months and longer.
The remaining 85% of patients had persistently active disease. In this group, 54% were female, 77% had a household income under $50,000 per year, 71% were nonwhite, and 75% had a history of atopy. Each of these characteristics significantly increased the odds of persistently active atopic dermatitis in the multivariable model (P less than .05 for each association).
Nonwhite race and history of atopy were the strongest predictors of persistently active disease – each lowered the odds of complete disease control by almost 50% (odds ratio, 0.53). Furthermore, females had 37% lower odds of complete disease control compared with males (OR, 0.63), and individuals with household income under $50,000 had 16% lower odds of complete disease control compared with those with higher annual incomes (OR, 0.84).
The link between lower socioeconomic status and persistently active eczema belies previous findings, the researchers noted. Those studies found that individuals of higher socioeconomic status were at greater risk for developing atopic dermatitis, but “failed to account for the chronic nature of the disease. In contrast, our results suggest that atopic dermatitis persistence may be associated with lower income and nonwhite race, and highlight the importance of longitudinal studies that permit analysis of mechanisms of disease control over time.”
Dr. Abuabara received a grant from the Clinical & Translational Science Institute of UCSF. She had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. –Among patients with atopic dermatitis, persistently active disease was significantly more common among females of nonwhite race with a history of atopy than among patients without these characteristics, in an analysis of survey data from the Pediatric Elective Eczema Registry.
Annual household income under $50,000 also was a significant predictor of persistently active eczema, according to Katrina Abuabara, MD, of the department of dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, and her associates, who reported their results in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
Atopic dermatitis often persists into adulthood, but few studies have explored contributors to poor disease control. To help fill that gap, the investigators analyzed 65,237 surveys from the Pediatric Eczema Elective Registry (PEER), which tracks children and young adults aged 2-26 years with physician-diagnosed atopic dermatitis. The average age of the 6,237 patients was 7 years at enrollment (standard deviation, 4 years). They were followed at 6-month intervals for up to 10 years, with an average of about 10 surveys per respondent (standard deviation, 6.3 surveys).
In all, 4,607 patients (74% of the cohort) returned surveys spanning early childhood through their mid-20s. Only 15% of patients had “resolving” disease, meaning that as they aged, they increasingly reported complete disease control for periods of 6 months and longer.
The remaining 85% of patients had persistently active disease. In this group, 54% were female, 77% had a household income under $50,000 per year, 71% were nonwhite, and 75% had a history of atopy. Each of these characteristics significantly increased the odds of persistently active atopic dermatitis in the multivariable model (P less than .05 for each association).
Nonwhite race and history of atopy were the strongest predictors of persistently active disease – each lowered the odds of complete disease control by almost 50% (odds ratio, 0.53). Furthermore, females had 37% lower odds of complete disease control compared with males (OR, 0.63), and individuals with household income under $50,000 had 16% lower odds of complete disease control compared with those with higher annual incomes (OR, 0.84).
The link between lower socioeconomic status and persistently active eczema belies previous findings, the researchers noted. Those studies found that individuals of higher socioeconomic status were at greater risk for developing atopic dermatitis, but “failed to account for the chronic nature of the disease. In contrast, our results suggest that atopic dermatitis persistence may be associated with lower income and nonwhite race, and highlight the importance of longitudinal studies that permit analysis of mechanisms of disease control over time.”
Dr. Abuabara received a grant from the Clinical & Translational Science Institute of UCSF. She had no disclosures.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. –Among patients with atopic dermatitis, persistently active disease was significantly more common among females of nonwhite race with a history of atopy than among patients without these characteristics, in an analysis of survey data from the Pediatric Elective Eczema Registry.
Annual household income under $50,000 also was a significant predictor of persistently active eczema, according to Katrina Abuabara, MD, of the department of dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, and her associates, who reported their results in a poster at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.
Atopic dermatitis often persists into adulthood, but few studies have explored contributors to poor disease control. To help fill that gap, the investigators analyzed 65,237 surveys from the Pediatric Eczema Elective Registry (PEER), which tracks children and young adults aged 2-26 years with physician-diagnosed atopic dermatitis. The average age of the 6,237 patients was 7 years at enrollment (standard deviation, 4 years). They were followed at 6-month intervals for up to 10 years, with an average of about 10 surveys per respondent (standard deviation, 6.3 surveys).
In all, 4,607 patients (74% of the cohort) returned surveys spanning early childhood through their mid-20s. Only 15% of patients had “resolving” disease, meaning that as they aged, they increasingly reported complete disease control for periods of 6 months and longer.
The remaining 85% of patients had persistently active disease. In this group, 54% were female, 77% had a household income under $50,000 per year, 71% were nonwhite, and 75% had a history of atopy. Each of these characteristics significantly increased the odds of persistently active atopic dermatitis in the multivariable model (P less than .05 for each association).
Nonwhite race and history of atopy were the strongest predictors of persistently active disease – each lowered the odds of complete disease control by almost 50% (odds ratio, 0.53). Furthermore, females had 37% lower odds of complete disease control compared with males (OR, 0.63), and individuals with household income under $50,000 had 16% lower odds of complete disease control compared with those with higher annual incomes (OR, 0.84).
The link between lower socioeconomic status and persistently active eczema belies previous findings, the researchers noted. Those studies found that individuals of higher socioeconomic status were at greater risk for developing atopic dermatitis, but “failed to account for the chronic nature of the disease. In contrast, our results suggest that atopic dermatitis persistence may be associated with lower income and nonwhite race, and highlight the importance of longitudinal studies that permit analysis of mechanisms of disease control over time.”
Dr. Abuabara received a grant from the Clinical & Translational Science Institute of UCSF. She had no disclosures.
AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING
Key clinical point: Persistently active atopic dermatitis is associated with nonwhite race, annual household income under $50,000, female sex, and history of atopy.
Major finding: Nonwhite race and history of atopy each lowered the odds of complete disease control by about 43% (odds ratios, 0.53; P less than .05).
Data source: A longitudinal cohort study of 6,237 patients aged 2-26 years from the Pediatric Eczema Elective Registry (PEER).
Disclosures: Dr. Abuabara received a grant from the Clinical & Translational Science Institute of UCSF. She had no disclosures.