Osier Emily, Wang Audrey S, Tollefson Megha M, Cordoro Kelly M, Daniels Stephen R, Eichenfield Andrew, Gelfand Joel M, Gottlieb Alice B, Kimball Alexa B, Lebwohl Mark, Mehta Nehal N, Paller Amy S, Schwimmer Jeffrey B, Styne Dennis M, Van Voorhees Abby S, Tom Wynnis L, Eichenfield Lawrence F
Department of Dermatology, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk.
Division of Dermatology, Sharp Rees-Stealy Medical Group, San Diego, California.
JAMA Dermatol. 2017 Jul 1;153(7):698-704. doi: 10.1001/jamadermatol.2017.0499.
Psoriasis is a complex inflammatory skin condition associated with serious medical comorbidities in adults, including obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, type 2 diabetes mellitus, psoriatic arthritis, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, depression, anxiety, and decreased quality of life. Because psoriasis begins in childhood in almost one-third of patients, early identification of risk may be critical to minimizing effects on future health.
To develop the first set of guidelines for comorbidity screening for patients with pediatric psoriasis based on current evidence.
A literature review was performed using PubMed from January 1999 through December 2015. Limiting the search to human studies published in English and removing reviews and editorials produced 153 relevant manuscripts. An expert panel in psoriasis, pediatric dermatology, pediatric rheumatology, pediatric gastroenterology, pediatric endocrinology, and adult and pediatric cardiology used the patient-centered Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy (SORT) method to evaluate and grade the quality of evidence.
Because of the limited number of pediatric studies published on these topics, the strength of the panel's recommendations is classified as SORT level C expert consensus recommendations. The majority of recommendations coincide with those endorsed by the American Academy of Pediatrics for the general pediatric patient but with added attention to signs and symptoms of arthritis, depression, and anxiety. The panel also identified key areas for further investigation.
Patients with pediatric psoriasis should receive routine screening and identification of risk factors for associated comorbidities. These guidelines are relevant for all health care providers caring for patients with pediatric psoriasis, including primary care clinicians, dermatologists, and pediatric specialists. Because these are the first pediatric guidelines, re-review and refinement will be necessary as studies further detail, and possibly stratify, risk in affected children.
银屑病是一种复杂的炎症性皮肤病,与成人的严重医学合并症相关,包括肥胖、高血压、血脂异常、2型糖尿病、银屑病关节炎、非酒精性脂肪性肝病、抑郁症、焦虑症以及生活质量下降。由于几乎三分之一的患者在儿童期就开始患银屑病,早期识别风险对于将其对未来健康的影响降至最低可能至关重要。
根据现有证据制定第一套针对儿童银屑病患者合并症筛查的指南。
使用PubMed对1999年1月至2015年12月的文献进行了综述。将搜索范围限制为以英文发表的人体研究,并排除综述和社论,共获得153篇相关手稿。一个由银屑病、儿童皮肤科、儿童风湿病、儿童胃肠病学、儿童内分泌学以及成人和儿童心脏病学领域的专家组成的小组,采用以患者为中心的推荐分类法(SORT)来评估和分级证据质量。
由于关于这些主题发表的儿科研究数量有限,该小组建议的力度被归类为SORT C级专家共识建议。大多数建议与美国儿科学会针对普通儿科患者的建议一致,但额外关注了关节炎、抑郁症和焦虑症的体征和症状。该小组还确定了需要进一步研究的关键领域。
儿童银屑病患者应接受常规筛查,并识别相关合并症的风险因素。这些指南适用于所有照顾儿童银屑病患者的医疗保健提供者,包括初级保健临床医生、皮肤科医生和儿科专家。由于这些是首批儿科指南,随着研究进一步详细阐述并可能对受影响儿童的风险进行分层,有必要重新审查和完善这些指南。