AI Article Synopsis

  • New treatments for atopic dermatitis (AD) have emerged over the last decade, yet prevalence and incidence rates remained stable at around 4% and 5.7/1000, respectively, from 2012 to 2021.
  • Treatment usage was highest in the first year after diagnosis, with children using more low-potency topical corticosteroids, while adults used more high-potency options.
  • A follow-up study showed that only 21.5% of children and 38.3% of adults diagnosed with AD in 2012 had ongoing diagnoses or treatments a decade later, indicating a notable burden of disease and treatment.

Article Abstract

In the last decade, new treatments for atopic dermatitis (AD) have emerged. We aimed to describe trends of the diagnosis, disease course, and treatment of AD over a decade (2012-2021) using data from Maccabi Healthcare Services (a 2.7-million-member healthcare provider in Israel). The AD prevalence was stable (4.0% on 31 December 2021 vs. 4.3% on 31 December 2012). The annual AD incidence was also stable (5.8/1000 in 2012 and 5.7/1000 in 2021). AD-related treatment use was highest in the first year post-diagnosis, and it included, among children ( = 87,414) vs. adults ( = 36,865), low-potency topical corticosteroids (TCS) (41.8% vs. 27.1%), mid-potency TCS (30.1% vs. 28.1%), high-potency TCS (34.9% vs. 60.3%), topical calcineurin inhibitor (10.8% vs. 10.1%), phosphodiesterase-4-inhibitor (0.3% vs. 0.7% overall; approved in 2019), phototherapy (0.1% vs. 2.3%), and systemic/biologic treatments (13.0% vs. 13.3%). Among children diagnosed in 2012 and followed through to 2021 ( = 5248), 21.5% had ≥1 AD diagnosis/treatment 10 years later (among 3223 adults: 38.3%). We conclude that the incidence and prevalence rates of AD were comparable to those in similar database studies and remained relatively stable over the past decade. The results underscore the burden of medication use among children and adults, particularly in the first year after AD diagnosis, and the low rate of AD diagnosis among patients originally diagnosed as children 10 years earlier.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10779695PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm13010281DOI Listing

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