Title: Atopic Dermatitis
1Atopic Dermatitis
- Adam Goldstein, MD
- Associate Professor
- UNC Department of Family Medicine
- Chapel Hill, NC
- aog_at_med.unc.edu
2Objectives
- Improve ability to accurately diagnose and manage
90 of cases of atopic dermatitis - Recognize differences in infant, childhood and
adult presentations of atopic dermatitis - Improve ability to diagnose and manage conditions
associated with and sometimes confused with
atopic dermatitis -
3Atopic Dermatitis Definition
- Atopic dermatitis eczema itchy skin
- Greek- meaning
- (ec-) over
- (-ze) out
- (-ma) boiling
- Infants small children (affects 1 in 7)
- Atopic dermatitis of childhood may reappear at
different site later in life.
4Atopic Dermatitis Cause
- The exact cause is unknown.
5Atopic Dermatitis Cause
(Charlesworth, Am J Med, 2002)
6Atopic Dermatitis Cause
- ? Inborn skin defect that tends to run in
families, e.g. asthma or hay fever - 85 with high serum IgE and skin tests food
inhalant - (Jones, Clin Rev Allergy, 1993)
7Morphology
8Distribution
- In infants, the face is often affected first,
then the hands and feet dry red patches may
appear all over the body. - In older children, the skin folds are most often
affected, especially the elbow creases and behind
the knees. - In adults, the face and hands are more likely to
be involved.
9Distribution
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13Hand Eczema
14Foot Eczema
15Atopic Derm Adults
16Atopic Derm Adults
17Atopic Dermatitis Associated features
- The skin is usually dry, itchy easily irritated
by - soap
- detergents
- wool clothing
- May worsen in hot weather emotional stress.
- May worsen with exposure to dust cats.
18Associated Findings
19Associated Findings
20Associated Findings
21Associated Findings
22Hyperlinear Palmar Creases
23Diagnosis
- Major characteristics
- Pruritus with or without excoriation
- Typical morphology and distribution
- Chronic relapsing dermatitis
- Personal or family history of atopy (asthma,
allergy, atopic derm, contact urticaria) - Other characteristics
- Xerosis/Ichthyosis/palmar hyper/kerat. pilaris
- Early age of onset
- Cutaneous colonization and/or overt infections
- Hand/foot/nipple/contact dermatitis, cheilitis,
conjunctivitis, Erythroderma, subcapsular
cataracts - (Drake, JAAD, 1992)
24Differential Diagnosis
25Differential Diagnosis
- Seborrheic dermatitis
- Scabies
26Differential Diagnosis
- Seborrheic dermatitis
- Scabies
- Drugs
27Differential Diagnosis
- Seborrheic dermatitis
- Scabies
- Drugs
- Psoriasis
28Differential Diagnosis
- Seborrheic dermatitis
- Scabies
- Drugs
- Psoriasis
- Allergic contact dermatitis
29Differential Diagnosis
- Seborrheic dermatitis
- Scabies
- Drugs
- Psoriasis
- Allergic contact dermatitis
- Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma
30Atopic Dermatitis Treatment
- 1. Reduce contact with irritants (soap
substitutes) - 2. Reduce exposure to allergens
- 3. Emollients
- 4. Topical Steroids
- 5. Antihistamines
- 6. Antibiotics
- 7. Steroid sparing
- 8. Other (herbals, soaps)
311. Reduce contact with irritants
- Avoid overheating lukewarm baths, 100 cotton
clothes, keep bedding to minimum - Avoid direct skin contact with rough fibers,
particularly wool, limit/eliminate detergents - Avoid dusty conditions low humidity
- Avoid cosmetics (make-ups, perfumes) as all can
irritate - Avoid soap- use soap substitute
- Use gloves to handle chemicals and detergents
32Soap Substitutes
- Cetaphil- soap substitute- far less drying and
irritating than soap - Cleansing moisturizing formulations, all OTC
- Lotion, bar, soap, cream, sunscreen
- Costs about 8-9 for 16 oz.
332. Reduce exposure to allergens
- Keep home, especially bedroom, free of dust.
- Allergic reactions include house dust mite,
molds, grass pollens animal dander. - Special diets will not help most individuals b/c
little evidence that food is major culprit. - If food allergies exists, most likely d/t dairy
products, eggs, wheat, nuts, shellfish, certain
fruits or food additives.
343. Emollients
- Emollients soften the skin soft and reduce
itching. - Moisture Trapping effectiveness
- Best Oils (e.g. Petroleum Jelly)
- Moderate Creams
- Least Lotions
- Apply emollients after bathing and times when the
skin is unusually dry (e.g. winter months).
35Emollients (contd)
- Large variety (e.g. Vanicream, Eucerin,
Lubriderm, Moisturel, Curel, Neutrogena) - Inexpensive emollients include vegetable
shortening (Snowdrift by Martha White) and
petroleum jelly (Vaseline) - Urea creams
- Oils
36Emollients Alpha-Hydroxy acid
- Creams are excellent for relieving dryness, but
can sting sometimes aggravate eczema - Useful for maintenance when no longer inflamed
- Forces epidermal cells to produce keratin that is
softer, more flexible and less likely to crack - Preparations
- Glycolic Acid (8)
- Lactic Acid or Lac-Hydrin (5-12)
- Urea (3-6)
- Use 1X/ day
37Emollients Oils
- Consider using bath oil or mineral oil-based
lotions in lukewarm bath water - Add to tub 15 minutes into bath
- Bath oil preparations
- Alpha-Keri
- Aveeno bath
- Jeri-Bath
- Colloidal oatmeal (Aveeno) reduces itching
384. Corticosteroids
- Topical steroids very effective
- Ointments for dry or lichenified skin
- Creams for weeping skin or body folds
- Lotions or scalp applications for hair-areas.
39 Corticosteroids
- Hydrocortisone 1-2.5 applied to all skin.
- Quite safe used even for months
- Use intermittently thin areas- (eg-face
genitals) - Stronger potency topical steroids for
nonfacial/genital regions. - Avoid potent/ultrapotent topical steroid
preparations on face, armpits, groins bottom.
40 Corticosteroids
- Once under control, intermittent use of topical
corticosteroid may prevent relapse - Systemic steroids may bring under rapid control,
but may precipitate rebound - Once daily probably most cost effective
- (Green, Br J Dermatol, 2005)
41Steroids and Young Children
- Fluticasone proprionate cream 0.05
- Moderate- severe atopic derm gt 3 months
- Applied bid 3-4 weeks- mean 64 BSA
- No HPA suppression
(Friedlander, J Am Acad Dermatol, 2002)
42Corticosteroids Pearls
- Different preparations prescribed for different
parts of body or for different situations - Educate on
- potencies proper usage
- write down directions
- Bring all topicals each appointment to clarify use
435. Antibiotics
- Atopic eczema frequently secondarily colonized
with a bacteria (up to 30). - Use oral antibiotics in recalcitrant or
widespread cases.
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45Keep it simple
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476. Antihistamines
- Oral antihistamines can reduce urticaria itch
- Non-sedating antihistamines less side effects but
more expensive - Sedative effect of hydroxyzine diphenhydramine
helpful
487. Steroid Sparing
- Topical calcineurin inhibitors
- Tacrolimus ointment pimecrolimus cream
- Oral Cyclosporine
- Ultraviolet light therapy (phototherapy) with
PUVA (psoralens plus ultraviolet A radiation) or
combinations of UVA UVB - (Jekler, J Am Acad Dermatol, 1990)
49Tacrolimus ointment (0.03, 0.1 Protopic)
- Mild to moderate eczema
- Steroid dependent or signs of atrophy
- Non-steroid responsive
- BID x 2-4 weeks to evaluate response
- Transient stinging possible
- Longer disease-free intervals
- Cost similar to high potency steroids (30gm/60)
- (Ruzicka, N Engl J Med, 1997)
50Pimecrolimus cream 1 (15, 30, 100 gm
Elidel)
- Approved Dec. 2001
- Blocks production/release cytokines T-cells
- Moderate eczema
- Steroid sparing
- Transient stinging 8 children, 26 adults
- Cost similar to high potency steroids (30gm/60)
- (Ruzicka, N Engl J Med, 1997)
- (Eichenfield, J Am Acad Dermatol, 2002)
51Tacrolimus ointment pimecrolimus cream
- Licensed for patients gt 2 years old mild-moderate
eczema\ - Safety?
- In controlled trials appear safe in adults and
children - In 2005, FDA issued warnings about a possible
link between the topical calcineurin inhibitors
and cancer (? increased risk of lymphoma and skin
cancers with topical exposure) - However, no definite causal relationship
established - FDA recommends that these agents are used only as
second-line therapy in patients unresponsive to
or intolerant of other treatments - Avoid in children younger than two years of age
- Use for short periods of time and minimum amount
necessary - Avoid continuous use
- Avoid in patients with compromised immune systems
52Ointments (Tacrolimus) better than cream
(Pimecrolimus)
53Oral Cyclosporine and PUVA
54Self Monitoring
The patient-oriented eczema measure
(Charman, Arch Dermatol, 2004)
55Other
- Psychological support
- Alternative treatments
- Chinese herbal tea
- Variably effective-not very palatable
- Liver toxicity possible
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57Other
- Evening Primrose Oil / Star Flower Oil
- Contains gamma linolenic acid, fatty acid
(deficient some atopic subjects)
58Alternative medications some patients may use for
eczema
- Licorice
- Calendula
- Echinacea
- Golden Seal
- Nettle
- Oats
59Probiotics in primary prevention of atopic
disease a randomized placebo-controlled trial.
- Lactobacillus
- prenatally to mothers (FH eczema, AR, asthma)
- postnatally for 6 months to infants
- Endpoint Chronic recurring eczema
- Eczema in probiotic 50 lt than placebo (23 vs
46) - Number needed to treat 4.5 (95 CI 2.6-15.6).
- (Kalliomaki, Lancet 2001)
60Other
- Laughter May Be Best Medicine...For Allergies
- NEW YORK, NY - Although few would consider
allergies to be funny, results of a new study
suggest that laughing them off might actually
work. Dr. Hajime Kimata, of Unitika Central
Hospital in Japan, induced allergic responses on
the skin of 26 people with allergic dermatitis by
exposing them to house dust mites, cedar pollen
and cat hair, and then had them watch Modern
Times'', featuring Charlie Chaplin. The
participants exhibited a significant reduction in
their allergic responses after watching the
classic comedy, according to the report in the
February 14th issue of The Journal of the
American Medical Association. The effect lasted
for 4 hours after the viewing
61Other
- Coal tar or less messy preps (liquid carbonis
detergent 5-10) in Eucerin or Aquaphor - Chronic lichenified eczema patches
- Coal tar smells stains clothes so apply qhs
using old clothes and old linens - Coal tar can provoke a folliculitis.
62Soaps
- Mild or Hypoallergenic
- Dove (unscented) Contains lotion
- Keri
- Oil of Olay
- Basis
- Purpose
- Cetaphil Skin Cleanser (non-soap)
- Neutrogena bar
- Pure Ivory soap is very drying/irritating
63Antibacterial Soaps
- Dial and Lever 2000
- Cetaphil antibacterial cleansing bar
64Evidenced-based review 2002 (BMJ Clinical
Evidence)
- Positive evidence that
- topical corticosteroids relieve symptoms and are
safe - emollients steroids better than steroids alone
- excellent control of house dust mite reduces
symptoms if positive mite RAST scores children - bedding covers most effective
- Little to no evidence that
- dietary change reduces symptoms
- breast feeding or mother's diet prevents infant
eczema
65Systematic review 2000
- Insufficient evidence
- Ag avoidance pregnancy
- Antihistamines
- Dietary restriction
- Dust mite avoidance
- Hypnotherapy
- Emollients
- Massage
- Evening primrose oil
- Topical coal tar
- Topical doxepin
- Chinese herbs
- Positive evidence
- Topical steroids
- Oral cyclosporine
- UV light
- Psychological approaches
(Hoare, Health Technol Assess, 2000)
66Systematic review
- Not beneficial
- Cotton clothing
- Biofeedback
- Bid vs qd topical steroids
- Bath additives
- Topical antibiotic/steroids vs steroids alone
(Hoare, Health Technol Assess, 2000)
67Final Pearls
- Educate parents that the goal is
CONTROL not CURE - Atopics exposed to herpes virus or smallpox
vaccination may get severe infection with
widespread involvement d/t altered skin barrier.
68Severe herpes infections in children with eczema
69Atopic Derm and Smallpox Vaccine
(Ann Intern Med 2003139)
70Costs
H/C 1 Bid-tid 30 gm 3.00
TAC 0.1 Bid 30 gm 8.00
Fluticasone propionate 0.05 Qd-bid 30 gm 42.00
Mometasone furoate 0.1 Qd 30 gm 45.00
Betamethasone dipropionate 0.05 Bid 30 gm 20.00
Clobetasol propionate 0.05 Bid 30 gm 15.00
Halobetasol propionate 0.05 Qd-bid 30 gm 72.00
Pimecrolimus 1 Bid 30 gm 56.00
Tacrolimus 0.1 Bid 30 gm 60.00
Drugstore.com 2004
71CASE 1
- 3 year old female with h/o eczema since 4 months
old. Had done well on hydrocortisone 2.5
ointment when flared last winter. Parents ran
out of the ointment and have been using vaseline
and OTC hydrocortisone 0.5 without improvement.
Child is now waking at night and constantly
scratching. - What do you want to do?
72Case Treatment strategy
- Review mild skin care regimen
- Confirm use of
- mild cleanser
- daily moisturizers
- mild laundry detergent
- Prescribe sufficient potency quantity of
topical corticosteroids - Which steroid class(es) would you px?
73Case- topical steroid choices
- TAC 0.1 oint. bid worse areas x 7-14 days
- Switch to H/C 2.5 ointment BID
- Taper over 4 weeks to emollients if possible
- Confirm parents understand dangers of prolonged
steroid use and not to use potent steroids on
face
74F/U 2 weeks later
- Only slightly improved- now what?
75Now...
- Add oral antistaphylococcal agent for 7-14 days.
- REVIEW mild skin care regimen
- Follow-up in 2 weeks and SUCCESS!
76CASE 2
- 34 yo female with h/o hand eczema diagnosed by
former MD for 6 years. Seems to get worse in
winter, but never goes away entirely. A friend
told her it could be a fungus. She was given
fluocinonide (lidex) 0.05 cream and it helps
some. She wants a refill.
77CASE 2
- Not likely fungus given chronicity
- May have secondary staph infection
- May need more potent Class I steroid initially,
e.g. clobetasol propionate (temovate) ointment - Class II Fluocinonide (lidex) 0.05 cream ok less
severe
78Case 3
- 75 YO male with chronic itchy spots-
- Using hydrocortisone cream 2.5 bid to ankle-
minimal improvement - Using Class II Fluocinonide (lidex) 0.05
ointment under occlusion to hip area- only thing
that works
79Case 3
- 2.5 H/C too weak
- Fluocinonide (lidex) 0.05 ointment under
occlusion causing atrophy - Good case for topical tacrolimus
80Patient Education
- National Eczema Association
- www.eczema-assn.org
81Thank you.
82References
- Drake LA, et al. Guidelines of Care For Atopic
Dermatitis. J Am Acad Dermatol 199226485-8. - Atopic eczema. In Clinical Evidence British
Medical Journal 2001. Available online at
www.clinicalevidence.org - Correale CE, Walker C, Murphy L, Craig TJ. Atopic
Dermatitis A Review of Diagnosis and Treatment.
J Fam Pract 1999 available at http//www.aafp.org
/afp/990915ap/1191.html - Ruzicka T, Bieber T, Schopf E, et al. A
short-term trial of tacrolimus ointment for
atopic dermatitis. European Tacrolimus
Multicenter Atopic Dermatitis Study Group. N Engl
J Med 1997 337(12) 816-21. - Eichenfield LF, LuckyAW, Boguniewicz M, et al.
Safety and efficacy of pimecrolimus cream 1 in
the treatment of mild and moderate atopic
dermatitis in children and adolescents. J A Acad
Dermatol 2002 46 495-504 .
83References
- Charlesworth EN . Pruritic dermatoses overview
of etiology and therapy. Am J Med 2002 113S, 9A
25S-33S. - Wahn U, et al. Efficacy and safety of
pimecrolimus cream in the long-term management of
atopic dermatitis in children. Pediatrics 2002
110 (1 Pt 1) e2. - Friedlander SF, et al. Safety of fluticasone
proprionate cream 0.05 for the treatment of
severe and extensive atopic dermatitis in
children as young as 3 months. J Am Acad Dermatol
2002 46 387-394. - Hoare C, et al. Systematic review of treatments
for atopic eczema. Health Technol Assess 2000 2
1-191. - Green C, Colquitt JL, Kirby J, Davidson P.
Topical corticosteroids for atopic eczema
clinical and cost effectiveness of once-daily vs.
more frequent use. Br J Dermatol 2005 152
130-41. - Charman CR, Venn AJ, Williams HC. The
patient-oriented eczema measure development and
initial validation of a new tool for measuring
atopic eczema severity from the patients'
perspective. Arch Dermatol 2004 140 1513-9.