Lucky A W, Biro F M, Simbartl L A, Morrison J A, Sorg N W
Department of Dermatology, Lipid Research Clinic, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Ohio, USA.
J Pediatr. 1997 Jan;130(1):30-9. doi: 10.1016/s0022-3476(97)70307-x.
The objectives of this study were to determine which factors in early pubertal girls might be predictive of later, severe facial acne.
The study was a 5-year longitudinal cohort study, with yearly visits from 1987 through 1991, in a volunteer sample of 439 black and 432 white fourth- and fifth-grade girls with consent from their legal guardians. The subjects were recruited from public and parochial schools in Cincinnati, Ohio. The degree of facial acne was classified annually as mild, moderate, or severe. Blood samples were obtained at the first, third, and fifth years of the study. Using the acne status during the fifth year of the study as the outcome variable, we determined the contributions from the prior acne status and the serum levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), testosterone, free testosterone (FT), estradiol (E2), progesterone, and testosterone-estrogen binding globulin (TEBG) and compared the results at various ages and at times before and after menarche.
No racial differences in acne or hormone levels were found. There was a progressive increase in the number of acne lesions with age and maturation. The girls exhibited many more comedonal than inflammatory acne lesions, regardless of age. The girls in whom severe acne developed by the fifth year of the study had significantly more comedones and inflammatory lesions than girls with mild or moderate acne, as early as age 10 years, approximately 2 h years before menarche, a time when their degree of acne was mild. Girls with mild comedonal acne had significantly later onset of menarche (12.5 compared with 12.2 years) than girls with severe comedonal acne. Girls in whom severe comedonal acne developed had significantly higher levels of serum DHEAS and, in a longitudinal analysis, somewhat higher levels of testosterone and FT in comparison with girls who had mild or moderate comedonal acne. Serum E2, testosterone/E2, progesterone, and TEBG values were no different in girls with severe compared with mild or moderate comedonal acne.
The early development of comedonal acne may be one of the best predictors of later, more severe disease. The adrenal hormone DHEAS appears to play an important role in the initiation of acne. DHEAS, testosterone, and FT are associated with the perpetuation of severe comedonal acne. Early recognition of young girls at risk of having severe comedonal acne may enable the clinician to intervene and thus prevent unwanted sequelae.
本研究的目的是确定青春期早期女孩的哪些因素可能预测后期严重的面部痤疮。
该研究是一项为期5年的纵向队列研究,从1987年至1991年每年进行随访,样本为439名黑人及432名白人四、五年级女孩的志愿者,经其法定监护人同意。研究对象从俄亥俄州辛辛那提市的公立和教会学校招募。每年将面部痤疮程度分为轻度、中度或重度。在研究的第1年、第3年和第5年采集血样。以研究第5年的痤疮状况作为结果变量,我们确定了既往痤疮状况以及硫酸脱氢表雄酮(DHEAS)、睾酮、游离睾酮(FT)、雌二醇(E2)、孕酮和睾酮 - 雌激素结合球蛋白(TEBG)血清水平的作用,并比较了不同年龄以及初潮前后的结果。
未发现痤疮或激素水平存在种族差异。痤疮皮损数量随年龄和成熟度逐渐增加。无论年龄大小,女孩的粉刺性痤疮皮损都比炎性痤疮皮损多得多。到研究第5年出现严重痤疮的女孩,早在10岁时,即初潮前约2.5年痤疮程度为轻度时,其粉刺和炎性皮损就比轻度或中度痤疮女孩明显更多。轻度粉刺性痤疮女孩的初潮开始时间(12.5岁,而重度粉刺性痤疮女孩为12.2岁)明显晚于重度粉刺性痤疮女孩。与轻度或中度粉刺性痤疮女孩相比,出现严重粉刺性痤疮的女孩血清DHEAS水平明显更高,在纵向分析中,睾酮和FT水平也略高。重度粉刺性痤疮女孩与轻度或中度粉刺性痤疮女孩相比,血清E2、睾酮/E2、孕酮和TEBG值无差异。
粉刺性痤疮的早期发展可能是后期更严重疾病的最佳预测指标之一。肾上腺激素DHEAS似乎在痤疮的起始中起重要作用。DHEAS、睾酮和FT与严重粉刺性痤疮的持续存在有关。早期识别有严重粉刺性痤疮风险的年轻女孩,可能使临床医生能够进行干预,从而预防不良后果。