Conference Coverage

New treatments bring hope for severe atopic dermatitis


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE 2016 AAAAI ANNUAL MEETING

References

As exciting as the prospects are for these investigational agents, there also have been several recent important advances in the prevention of atopic dermatitis, she continued. Investigators led by Dr. Alan D. Irvine of Trinity College, Dublin, noninvasively measured transepidermal water loss in early infancy in more than 1,900 Irish 2-day-old infants and found that those in the 75th percentile for this early marker of skin barrier dysfunction were at 3.1-fold increased risk for diagnosis of atopic dermatitis by age 2 years (J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2016 Apr;137[4]:1111-6). This new-found ability to identify at-risk infants will be extremely helpful in designing atopic dermatitis prevention studies, according to Dr. Beck.

The other advance in prevention was provided via a randomized trial by Dr. Eric L. Simpson of Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, and his coinvestigators. They randomized a group of infants at high risk for atopic dermatitis to daily application of any of five OTC skin moisturizers or a no-moisturizer control group from 2 weeks through 6 months of age. The study hypothesis was that the moisturizers would help reverse the skin barrier abnormalities that play a key role in atopic dermatitis. The hypothesis was borne out by the finding that there was at least a 50% reduction in physician-diagnosed atopic dermatitis by age 6 months in the daily moisturizer group (J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2014 Oct;134[4]:818-23).

Dr. Beck concluded by describing a likely near-term atopic dermatitis prevention and management scenario: High-risk infants will be identified on the basis of noninvasive assessment of epithelial features, such as transepidermal water loss or the presence of high levels of thymic stromal lymphopoietin on the skin surface. Encouragement of daily moisturizing for these high-risk infants will prevent some of them from going on to develop eczema.

For those who do get eczema, dilute bleach baths will help in restoring normal skin barrier function, as was confirmed in an in-press study by Dr. Beck and her coinvestigators, who found that 46% of a group of adults with atopic dermatitis experienced at least a 50% improvement in EASI scores, a big improvement in itch, and reduced transepidermal water loss after 12 weeks of the bleach baths. As other investigators have reported, the bleach baths were very well tolerated and safe.

Dr. Beck reported serving as a consultant to eight pharmaceutical companies with an interest in developing new treatments for atopic dermatitis.

bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

Nemolizumab improved most common symptoms in moderate, severe atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology
Atopic Dermatitis Treatments Moving Forward: Report From the AAD Meeting
MDedge Dermatology
Staph aureus drives atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology
Recently identified eczema comorbidities include anemia, obesity
MDedge Dermatology
Phase III dupilumab data show significant improvements in atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology
Stick with wheat flour for baked egg and milk challenges
MDedge Dermatology
Some infants predisposed to epidermal barrier breakdown, atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology
A Practical Overview of Pediatric Atopic Dermatitis, Part 1: Epidemiology and Pathogenesis
MDedge Dermatology
Most atopic lesions colonized with Staph
MDedge Dermatology
Cochrane Review nixes specific allergen immunotherapy for atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology

Related Articles