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atopic dermatitis (atopic eczema)
Etiology:
1) idiopathic
2) inherited tendency to dry, sensitive, pruritic skin
3) lowered itch threshold with itch-scratch-rash cycle
4) not an allergic condition
- food allergy uncommon cause of flares [3]
- high sodium intake associated with atopic dermatitis [44]
5) evidence for altered T-cell function
Epidemiology:
1) common in patients with other atopic disorders
a) allergic rhinitis
b) allergic asthma
2) the disorder generally begins in infancy
3) in many children, the disorder resolves by age 3-5 years
- persistence of childhood-onset atopic dermatitis is common [45]
4) uncommon as a new disorder in older children & adults
- adult onset atopic dermatitis in 25% [45]
5) infants whose parents clean their pacifiers by sucking on them are at lower risk for developing eczema [10]
6) both sexes are affected 33
Pathology:
- pathology involves both immune response & skin barrier
- skin barrier leakage, with penetration of allergens
- dysregulation of CD4+ type 2 helper T (Th2)-cells
- large T-cell infiltrates similar to psoriasis [25]
- excessive production of IL-4, IL-5, IL-13, IL-22 IL-51, & UBXD8
- excessive production of IgE
- CBARA1 binds IgE in patients with severe skin manifestations
Genetics:
- mutations in the filaggrin gene (FLG) affects 30-50% of white patients [33]
- IL31 & IL31RA is up-regulated in lesional keratinocytes of patients with atopic dermatitis
- overexpression of cornifelin
- autoantigens binding IgE: NACA, KRT6A
- genes links to susceptibility: COL29A1, MS4A2, FLG, SOCS3, PHF11
Clinical manifestations:
1) chronic condition with exacerbations & remissions
2) generally presents during childhood [3]
3) family history of atopy (allergic rhinitis, asthma &/or food allergy)
4) pruritus, dry skin (xerosis)
5) distribution
a) infants
- face, cheeks, trunk, extensor surfaces (generally spares diaper area)
b) children (2-12 years of age)
- antecubital fossa, popliteal fossa, neck, wrist, ankle
c) adults
- hands, eyelids, genitalia, neck, flexural areas (antecubital fossa, popliteal fossa) [3]
6) lesion morphology
a) infants
- erythema, scaling, papules, vesicles, oozing
b) children
- inflammation, coalesced papules, lichenification
c) adults
- scaling, erythema, lichenification, hyperkeratosis
d) vesicles (acute), lichenification (chronic)
7) associated features
a) pigmentary changes including pityriasis alba
b) extra infraorbital eyelid fold (Dennie-Morgan line)
c) white dermatographism (white blanch after blunt stroke)
d) xerosis, keratosis pilaris, ichthyosis vulgaris
e) facial erythema or pallor
f) conjunctivitis
g) cataracts (10%)
h) hyperlinear palms, dermatitis of hands
8) primarily a disease of childhood, but may persist into adulthood as eczema, sensitive skin or hand dermatitis [3]
9) triad of allergic rhinitis, asthma, eczema [3]
* images [17,21,33]
Laboratory:
1) no specific laboratory tests
2) elevated serum IgE (80%) - not helpful for diagnosis [39]
3) eosinophilia (80%)
4) positive skin testing is common
5) gram stain of pustular lesions
Special laboratory:
- avoid routine testing for food allergies [3]
Differential diagnosis:
1) infants
a) irritant dermatitis, seborrhea, candidiasis
b) Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, ataxia telangiectasia, phenylketonuria, acrodermatitis enteropathica, Histiocytosis X
2) children
a) contact dermatitis, psoriasis, polymorphous light eruption
b) scabies, tinea, HIV
3) adults
- psoriasis, lichen simplex chronicus, drug eruption, nummular eczema, contact dermatitis
Complications:
1) secondary bacterial infection
- Staphylococcus aureus (very common, normal skin flora)
- formation of pustules is characteristic
- impetigo
- treatment with topical mupirocin
2) secondary viral infections
a) Herpes simplex (eczema herpeticum); can be life-threatening
b) Molluscum contagiosum
c) papilloma virus
3) secondary fungal infections
- Dermatophytosis
- Candidiasis
4) exfoliative erythroderma: can be life-threatening (different than eczema herpeticum?)
5) tachyphylaxis
6) early-onset atopic dermatitis associated with higher risk of
- food allergy (odds ratio 7)
- asthma (odds ratio 2.9)
7) risk allergic rhinitis & rhinoconjunctivitis associated early-onset & late-onset (odds ratio 4.0 & 3.2, respectively) [24,33]
8) increased risk of bone fractures including hip fracture, vertebral fracture & wrist fracture [29]
- overall RR=1.07 with more severe disease associated higher risk
- 2-fold increased risk of hip fracture with severe disease [29]
9) topical calcineurin inhibitors & crisaborole 2% most likely to cause local application-site reactions
- topical glucocorticoids least likely [48]
10) increased skin thinning with longer-term topical glucocorticoids
- not so with short-term topical glucocorticoids [48]
Management:
1) pharmacologic agents
a) topical agents
- fragance-free synthetic detergents rather than soap
- moisturizers, emollients (1st line) [42]
- use frequently & long term
- petroleum jelly, Eucerin, Keri, Lubriderm
- useful for prevention of atopic dermatitis in neonates [13]
- low potency glucocorticoids for face, infants, intertriginous areas
- hydrocortisone cream 1% BID
- desonide (Tridesilon) cream 0.05% BID
- twice weekly medium potency glucocorticoids for lichenified areas
- may also need occlusive therapy for 10-14 days
- palms, soles of feet, very thick eruptions
- triamcinolone 0.1% cream
- mometasone furoate (Elocon) 0.1% cream or ointment
- tar ointments (Fototar, T-Derm, Estar 5%)
- wet dressings for acute, weeping dermatitis
- normal saline
- Burrow's solution
- wet dressing over topical glucocorticoid [9]
- occluive wet wrap therapy
- potent topical glucocorticoids, JAK inhibitors & tacrolimus 0.1% most effective topical anti-inflammatory treatments for eczema [48]
- mild topical glucocorticoids, PDE-4 inhibitors & tapinarof 1% among the least effective treatments [48]
- topical calcineurin inhibitor (tacrolimus, pimecrolimus)
- recalcitrant eczema
- may be useful for face, eyelids & intertriginous areas where steroid atrophy is more likely [14]
- can alternate with glucocorticoids [4,5]
- replacing high-potency glucocorticoid with calcineurin inhibitor can allow resolution of skin atrophy, telangiectasias, & striae [41]
- topical phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE-4) inhibitor
- crisaborole (Eucrisa) topical FDA-approved [22,42]
- topical roflumilast 0.15% [38]
- topical Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor ruxolitinib [42]
- lukewarm baths for children [14]
- bleach bath (sodium hypochlorite 0.005%) 5-10 minutes for 5 consecutive days of benefit [7,14]
- risks of topical antiseptics may outweigh benefits [42]
- topical mupirocin for Staphylococcal infection (see Complications:)
- risks of topical antimicrobials may outweigh benefits [42]
b) systemic agents
- antibiotics for secondary infection
- erythromycin 250-500 mg PO QID
- dicloxacillin (Dynapen) 250-500 mg PO QID
- antihistamines for pruritus [14]
- hydroxyzine (Atarax) 10-25 mg PO QHS
- diphenhydramine (Benadryl) 25-50 mg PO QHS
- prednisone for severe cases
- immunosuppressants (cyclosporine, methotrexate, azathioprine, mycophenolate) [46]
- biologic agents
- dupilumab (Dupixent) safe with intermediate effectiveness [23,25,26,43]
- first biologic agent with robust evidence of efficacy [26]
- omalizumab [30]
- ruxolitinib (Jakafi) 1.5% BID [31]
- abrocitinib high dose effective but among the most harmful [34,43]
- upadacitinib (Rinvoq) 30 mg POO QD superior to dupilumab (Dupixent) 300 mg SQ every other week in patients with moderate-to-severe a topic dermatitis [36]
- more harmful than dupilumab (Dupixent) [43]
- lebrikizumab, & tralokinumab are of intermediate effectiveness & have favorable safety profile [43]
- nemolizumab + topical glucocorticoid & topical calcineurin inhibitor shows improvement in inflammation & pruritus [47]
- interferon-gamma (investigational)
- Lactobacillus fermentum may be of benefit [6]
c) tachyphylaxis may complicate management
2) phototherapy with narrow-band ultraviolet B radiation [11]
3) patient education
a) avoid sweating, temperature extremes, low humidity
b) avoid wool clothing
c) short, infrequent bathing, tepid water
d) cetaphil or mild soaps (Dove, Basis, Tone, Purpose, not Ivory)
e) keep skin well hydrated with moisturizers, bathing oils
f) control not cure is goal of therapy
g) not an emotional disorder, but is exacerbated by stress
h) dietary avoidance or elimination [46]
- low sodium diet may mitigate symptoms [44]
4) follow-up
a) asthma or allergic rhinitis will develop in 50%
b) cataracts will develop in 10% (15-25 years of age)
c) infantile form: 2/3 resolve by childhood
d) childhood form: 2/3 resolve by puberty
Related
atopic state
hand dermatitis
Specific
eczema herpeticum
General
eczematous dermatitis (eczema)
Database Correlations
OMIM correlations
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