Institute of Clinical Nursing Science, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Charitéplatz 1, 10117, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Dermatology, Venerology and Allergology, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Arch Dermatol Res. 2024 Jun 1;316(6):319. doi: 10.1007/s00403-024-03059-0.
The population of older people is steadily increasing and the majority live at home. Although the home and community are the largest care settings worldwide, most of the evidence on dermatological care relates to secondary and tertiary care. The overall aims were to map the available evidence regarding the epidemiology and burden of the most frequent skin conditions and regarding effects of screening, risk assessment, diagnosis, prevention and treatment of the most frequent skin conditions in older people living in the community. A scoping review was conducted. MEDLINE, Embase and Epistemonikos were systematically searched for clinical practice guidelines, reviews and primary studies, as well as Grey Matters and EASY for grey literature published between January 2010 and March 2023. Records were screened and data of included studies extracted by two reviewers, independently. Results were summarised descriptively. In total, 97 publications were included. The vast majority described prevalence or incidence estimates. Ranges of age groups varied widely and unclear reporting was frequent. Sun-exposure and age-related skin conditions such as actinic keratoses, xerosis cutis, neoplasms and inflammatory diseases were the most frequent dermatoses identified, although melanoma and/or non-melanoma skin cancer were the skin conditions investigated most frequently. Evidence regarding the burden of skin conditions included self-reported skin symptoms and concerns, mortality, burden on the health system, and impact on quality of life. A minority of articles reported effects of screening, risk assessment, diagnosis, prevention and treatment, mainly regarding skin cancer. A high number of skin conditions and diseases affect older people living at home and in the community but evidence about the burden and effective prevention and treatment strategies is weak. Best practices of how to improve dermatological care in older people remain to be determined and there is a particular need for interventional studies to support and to improve skin health at home.
人口老龄化正在稳步增长,其中大部分人居住在家庭中。尽管家庭和社区是全球最大的护理场所,但大多数关于皮肤病护理的证据都与二级和三级护理有关。总体目标是绘制有关最常见皮肤状况的流行病学和负担以及有关社区中老年人常见皮肤状况的筛查、风险评估、诊断、预防和治疗效果的现有证据。进行了范围综述。系统地搜索了 MEDLINE、Embase 和 Epistemonikos 中的临床实践指南、综述和原始研究,以及 Grey Matters 和 EASY 中的灰色文献,这些文献均发表于 2010 年 1 月至 2023 年 3 月期间。由两名审查员独立筛选记录并提取纳入研究的数据。结果以描述性方式进行总结。总共纳入了 97 篇出版物。绝大多数描述了患病率或发病率估计。年龄组的范围差异很大,且报告不明确的情况很常见。阳光暴露和与年龄相关的皮肤状况,如光化性角化病、皮肤干燥、肿瘤和炎症性疾病,是最常见的皮肤病,但黑色素瘤和/或非黑色素瘤皮肤癌是最常调查的皮肤状况。关于皮肤状况负担的证据包括自我报告的皮肤症状和担忧、死亡率、对卫生系统的负担以及对生活质量的影响。少数文章报告了筛查、风险评估、诊断、预防和治疗的效果,主要是关于皮肤癌。大量的皮肤状况和疾病影响居住在家庭和社区中的老年人,但有关负担和有效预防和治疗策略的证据很薄弱。仍然需要确定如何改善老年人的皮肤科护理的最佳实践,并且特别需要干预性研究来支持和改善家庭中的皮肤健康。