Ministry of Health Holdings, Singapore, Singapore.
Khoo Teck Puat - National University Children's Medical Institute, Department of Paediatrics, National University Hospital, NUHS Tower Block Level 12, 1E Kent Ridge Road, Singapore, 119228, Singapore.
Eur J Pediatr. 2024 Dec;183(12):5113-5128. doi: 10.1007/s00431-024-05804-z. Epub 2024 Oct 7.
To evaluate the association between atopic dermatitis (AD) and linear growth in children, and determine factors associated with compromised linear growth in children with AD. A PRISMA-compliant systematic review was conducted. Databases (PubMed, Embase, Scopus and Cochrane) were searched from inception to June 2024 for articles that reported a quantitative relationship between AD and linear growth in children (< 18 years old). Quality of included articles was assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Tools while quality of evidence in these studies was evaluated using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) criteria. Fourteen studies (comprising 50,146 patients with AD) were included. Seven studies reported a strong positive or positive association between AD and reduced height standard deviation score (SDS) in children; the others reported no association. Only 3 studies had moderate quality of evidence, all of which reported an association between AD and poorer height SDS; the remaining 11 studies scored low in quality of evidence. Three studies reported the impact of AD on height to be transient. Secondary analysis showed AD severity, earlier AD onset, sleep disruption and, food restriction, to be risk factors for linear growth impairment in patients with AD. Topical steroid use was not associated with shorter stature in patients with AD. Conclusion: Current evidence on the association between childhood AD and poor linear growth is weak and inconsistent. However, patients with more severe AD, earlier disease onset, poorer sleep quality and higher nutritional restrictions appear more susceptible to linear growth impairment. What is known? • There is inconsistent evidence of the association between atopic dermatitis (AD) and linear growth in children in current literature, with some studies suggesting that AD may negatively impact linear height while other studies do not report similar associations. What is new? • There is no strong association between AD in childhood and poorer linear growth. • There may be a transient slowing of linear growth in children with AD, mimicking constitutional growth delay. • Children with severe AD, earlier disease onset, poorer sleep quality and nutritional restrictions may be at risk of more significant linear growth impairment. • Topical steroid use does not appear to contribute to shorter height in children with AD.
为了评估特应性皮炎(AD)与儿童线性生长之间的关联,并确定与 AD 儿童线性生长受损相关的因素。进行了一项符合 PRISMA 标准的系统评价。从开始到 2024 年 6 月,在 PubMed、Embase、Scopus 和 Cochrane 数据库中搜索了报告 AD 与儿童线性生长之间定量关系的文章(年龄<18 岁)。使用 Joanna Briggs 研究所的批判性评估工具评估纳入文章的质量,使用推荐评估、制定与评价(GRADE)标准评估这些研究中的证据质量。纳入了 14 项研究(包括 50146 例 AD 患儿)。有 7 项研究报告 AD 与儿童身高标准差评分(SDS)降低之间存在强正相关或正相关;其余研究则无关联。仅有 3 项研究具有中等质量的证据,均报告 AD 与身高 SDS 较差之间存在关联;其余 11 项研究的证据质量评分较低。有 3 项研究报告 AD 对身高的影响是短暂的。二次分析显示,AD 的严重程度、更早的发病时间、睡眠中断和饮食限制是 AD 患者线性生长受损的危险因素。局部类固醇的使用与 AD 患者身材矮小无关。结论:目前关于儿童 AD 与生长不良之间关联的证据较弱且不一致。然而,AD 更严重、发病更早、睡眠质量更差和营养限制更高的患者似乎更容易发生线性生长受损。已知:当前文献中关于儿童特应性皮炎(AD)与线性生长之间的关联证据不一致,一些研究表明 AD 可能对线性身高产生负面影响,而其他研究则未报告类似的关联。新发现:AD 与儿童的线性生长不良之间没有强烈的关联。在患有 AD 的儿童中,线性生长可能会暂时放缓,类似于特发性生长延迟。AD 严重、发病早、睡眠质量差和营养限制的儿童可能存在更严重的线性生长受损风险。局部类固醇的使用似乎不会导致 AD 儿童身高较矮。