| Literature DB >> 17021761 |
Ulrich Mrowietz1, James T Elder, Jonathan Barker.
Abstract
It is well established that several inflammatory-type conditions, such as arthritis, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and irritable bowel disease exist comorbidly and at an increased incidence in patients with psoriasis. Psoriasis and other associated diseases are thought to share common inflammatory pathways. Conditions such as these, with similar pathogenic mechanisms involving cytokine dysregulation, are referred to as immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs). Considerable evidence for the genetic basis of comorbidities in psoriasis exists. The WHO has reported that the occurrence of chronic diseases, including IMIDs, are a rising global burden. In addition, conditions linked with psoriasis have been associated with increasing rates of considerable morbidity and mortality. The presence of comorbid conditions in psoriasis patients has important implications for clinical management. QoL, direct health care expenditures and pharmacokinetics of concomitant therapies are impacted by the presence of comorbid conditions. For example, methotrexate is contraindicated in hepatic impairment, while patients on cyclosporin should be monitored for kidney function. In addition, some agents, such as beta blockers, lithium, synthetic antimalarial drugs, NSAIDs and tetracycline antibiotics, have been implicated in the initiation or exacerbation of psoriasis. Consequently, collaboration between physicians in different specialties is essential to ensuring that psoriasis treatment benefits the patient without exacerbating associated conditions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17021761 PMCID: PMC1705513 DOI: 10.1007/s00403-006-0707-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dermatol Res ISSN: 0340-3696 Impact factor: 3.017
Diseases associated with psoriasis [65]
| Condition | Prevalence in psoriasis | Hospital controls | RKI sample OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diabetes mellitus type I | 11 (1.9) | 3.99 (1.30–12.2)* | 6.34 (2.80–14.3)*** |
| Diabetes mellitus type II | 68 (11.7) | 2.48 (1.70–3.61)** | 2.07 (1.50–2.85)*** |
| Arterial hypertension | 127 (21.9) | 3.27 (2.41–4.43)*** | 1.39 (1.09–1.77)* |
| Hyperlipoproteinemia | 30 (5.2) | 2.09 (1.23–3.54)** | 0.83 (0.54–1.28)f |
| Coronary heart disease | 32 (5.5) | 1.77 (1.07–2.93)* | 0.93(0.60–1.43)f |
| Metabolic syndrome | 25 (4.3) | 5.92 (2.78–12.8)*** | 2.20 (1.41–3.43)** |
| Alcohol consumption none vs. moderate | 246 (42.3) | 2.78 (2.14–3.62)*** | 2.03 (1.62–2.55)*** |
| None vs. regularly | 75 (12.9) | 3.33 (2.20–5.05)*** | 2.00 (1.45–2.77)*** |
| None vs. heavya | 24 (4.1) | 3.61 (1.85–7.07)*** | 8.50 (5.28–16.8)*** |
| Cigarette smoking | 264 (45.4) | 2.96 (2.27–3.84)*** | 2.49 (2.00–3.10)*** |
The prevalence of diseases in plaque-type psoriasis patients (n = 581) was compared with hospital-based controls (n = 1,044) and a population-based survey (RKI sample; n = 4,705). Common odds ratios adjusted for age and sex are presented with their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), f not significant
aDue to low numbers, only adjusted for sex
*P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01; ***P < 0.0001 by Mantel–Haenszel test
Fig. 1Inflammatory pathway in psoriasis [50]. Working model for immunopathogenesis of psoriasis. Multiple stages are proposed for trafficking patterns of immunocytes, involving signals in which symptomless skin is converted into a psoriatic plaque. Key inflammatory events include intraepidermal trafficking by CD8+ T cells and neutrophils. Reproduced with permission from J Clin Invest (2004, 113:1664–1675). Copyright 2004, The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Fig. 2WHO projected major causes of death 2005 [67]. The occurrence of chronic disease is a rising global burden and accounted for 72% of the total global burden of disease in the population aged 30 years and older in 2005. Reproduced with permission from Lancet (2005, 366:1578–1582). Copyright 2005, Elsevier Ltd
Percentage of psoriasis patients receiving medications for comorbid disease [84]
| Drug class | Patients (%) ( |
|---|---|
| ACE inhibitors | 12.3 |
| Oral anticoagulants | 11.3 |
| Diuretics | 12.4 |
| Thyroid drugs | 9.9 |
| Beta blockers | 7.9 |
| Psycholeptics | 5.6 |
| NSAIDs | 7.0 |
| Lithium salts | 0.70 |
| Interferon-alpha | 0.25 |
| The increased cardiovascular risk in psoriasis may result from |
| • The increased prevalence of associated risk factors, such as smoking, obesity, hypertension and alcohol misuse. |
| • The use of dyslipidaemic therapies, such as corticosteroids, acitretin and ciclosporin. |
| • An associated unfavourable lipid profile (high triglycerides, low HDL). |
| • Endothelial dysfunction. |
| • Uncontrolled inflammation. |
| • Combination of some or all of the above. |