Wiley, Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology, 2024
DOI: 10.1111/jdv.20160
Full text: Unavailable
AbstractBackgroundFlare patterns are not routinely considered in the severity classification or in clinical decision‐making of atopic dermatitis (AD), but frequent or severe flares may contribute considerably to the disease burden.ObjectivesTo characterize patients with AD in relation to their flare pattern and compare flare patterns to disease severity, life quality and treatment satisfaction.MethodsPatients with AD from the Danish Skin Cohort were included if they had active AD with and available data on number of flare‐ups within the last 12 months. Categorical variables were presented as frequencies and percentages, whereas numerical variables were presented as median and interquartile ranges (IQR). Between‐group differences were tested with chi‐squared tests.ResultsA total of 1557 patients were included, with 57 reporting 0 flares, 698 (1–5 flares), 324 (6–10 flares) and 478 reporting >10 flares during the past 12 months. Both the severity measured by PO‐SCORAD and the impairment of life quality measured by DLQI were higher among patients with more flares (median [IQR] PO‐SCORAD: 13.0 [5.6–22.3], 29.7 [20.8–40.6], 36.3 [26.7–47.6]and 42.9 [30.7–55.6], respectively for the four flares strata, and median [IQR] DLQI: 1.0 [0.0–2.0], 3.0 [1.0–7.0], 4.0 [1.8–9.0] and 7.0 [3.0–11.0]). Satisfaction with the current treatment was generally higher among patients with no flares. However, 36.8%, 24.6% and 23.7% of patients with 1–5, 6–10 and >10 flares reported being extremely or very satisfied with their current treatment.ConclusionsPatients with many flares often report a higher severity and impairment of life quality compared to patients with fewer flares. Information on flaring could benefit treatment decisions, thereby decreasing undertreatment of patients with mild AD but severe flaring.