BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The course of atopic dermatitis (AD) in childhood is characterized by typical changes in phenotype, including a shift from skin involvement to respiratory allergy usually around the third year of age. We thus designed a prospective study to monitor the outcome of severe AD and to investigate the association between cytokine gene polymorphisms and clinical manifestations. METHODS: Clinical and laboratory follow-up of 94 patients with severe AD and 103 healthy controls was performed using routine methodology. Allele, genotype, and haplotype frequencies of single nucleotide polymorphisms of 13 selected cytokine/receptor genes were analyzed using PCR with sequence-specific primers. RESULTS: In our study, genotypes of 7 polymorphisms--LL-4 -1098G/T and -590C/T, IL-6 -174C/G and nt565A/G, and IL-10 -1082A/G, -819C/T, and -592A/C were significantly associated with atopic AD (P < .05). A significant association was also found for TNF-alpha AA and IL-4 GC haplotypes and AD. We confirm the progressive clinical improvement of AD together with a decrease in the severity index SCORAD (SCORing atopic dermatitis) during childhood (P < .05). We found significant differences between IL-4Ralpha +1902 A/G and positivity of tree pollen-specific IgE (P < .05) in the AD group. Moreover, a weak association was also found between IL-10 -819C/T and IL-10 -590A/C and the appearance of allergic rhinitis (P < 0.1). CONCLUSIONS: We confirmed a clinical shift in allergic phenotype in the first 3 years of life, and showed an association between IL-4, IL-6, and IL-10 polymorphisms and AD. Our data indicate that IL-4alpha and IL-10 polymorphisms may be considered predictive factors of respiratory allergy in children with AD.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The course of atopic dermatitis (AD) in childhood is characterized by typical changes in phenotype, including a shift from skin involvement to respiratory allergy usually around the third year of age. We thus designed a prospective study to monitor the outcome of severe AD and to investigate the association between cytokine gene polymorphisms and clinical manifestations. METHODS: Clinical and laboratory follow-up of 94 patients with severe AD and 103 healthy controls was performed using routine methodology. Allele, genotype, and haplotype frequencies of single nucleotide polymorphisms of 13 selected cytokine/receptor genes were analyzed using PCR with sequence-specific primers. RESULTS: In our study, genotypes of 7 polymorphisms--LL-4 -1098G/T and -590C/T, IL-6-174C/G and nt565A/G, and IL-10-1082A/G, -819C/T, and -592A/C were significantly associated with atopic AD (P < .05). A significant association was also found for TNF-alpha AA and IL-4 GC haplotypes and AD. We confirm the progressive clinical improvement of AD together with a decrease in the severity index SCORAD (SCORing atopic dermatitis) during childhood (P < .05). We found significant differences between IL-4Ralpha+1902 A/G and positivity of tree pollen-specific IgE (P < .05) in the AD group. Moreover, a weak association was also found between IL-10-819C/T and IL-10-590A/C and the appearance of allergic rhinitis (P < 0.1). CONCLUSIONS: We confirmed a clinical shift in allergic phenotype in the first 3 years of life, and showed an association between IL-4, IL-6, and IL-10 polymorphisms and AD. Our data indicate that IL-4alpha and IL-10 polymorphisms may be considered predictive factors of respiratory allergy in children with AD.
Authors: Brian S Kim; Kelvin Wang; Mark C Siracusa; Steven A Saenz; Jonathan R Brestoff; Laurel A Monticelli; Mario Noti; Elia D Tait Wojno; Thomas C Fung; Masato Kubo; David Artis Journal: J Immunol Date: 2014-08-25 Impact factor: 5.422
Authors: A L Bosma; A Ascott; R Iskandar; K Farquhar; J Matthewman; M W Langendam; A Mulick; K Abuabara; H C Williams; P I Spuls; S M Langan; M A Middelkamp-Hup Journal: J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol Date: 2022-02-25 Impact factor: 9.228