| Literature DB >> 28701998 |
Fabrizio Guarneri1, Roberta Giuffrida1, Flavia Di Bari2, Serafinella Patrizia Cannavò1, Salvatore Benvenga2,3,4.
Abstract
Lichen planus (LP) and lichen sclerosus (LS) are cutaneous-mucous diseases with uncertain epidemiology. Current data, which are likely to be underestimated, suggest a prevalence in the general population of 0.1-4% for cutaneous LP, 1.27-2.0% for oral LP, and 0.1-3.3% for LS. While etiology of lichen is still unknown, clinical and histological evidence show an (auto)immune pathogenesis. Association of lichen with autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD) has been investigated in few studies. This association appears better defined in the case of LS, while is more controversial for LP. In both situations, the frequency of the association is higher in females. We review the available literature on the correlation between the different types of lichen and AITD, and the literature on the genetic risk factors which are shared by both conditions. Such data suggest that a common pathogenic mechanism could be the cause for co-occurrence of lichen and AITD, at least in some patients. Additionally, analyzing literature data and in continuity with our previous work on other autoimmune diseases, we suggest that molecular mimicry could trigger both diseases, and thus explain their co-occurrence.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmune thyroid disease; cutaneous lichen planus; human leukocyte antigen; infections; lichen sclerosus; molecular mimicry; mucous lichen planus; oral lichen planus
Year: 2017 PMID: 28701998 PMCID: PMC5484774 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2017.00146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Studies reporting clinical and/or laboratory data about subjects affected by lichen who were found positive for AITD.
| Reference, | Type of study and population | Main findings |
|---|---|---|
| Goolamali et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 26 patients with | 10/25 (40%) of female patients were positive for antithyroid cytoplasm antibodies ( |
| Tremaine et al. ( | Case report | Report on a 65-year-old woman simultaneously affected by |
| Kreuter et al. ( | Retrospective prevalence study on 532 patients affected by | AITD was associated with |
| Cooper et al. ( | Case–control study on 190 women with adult-onset vulvar | AITD was observed in 16.3% of patients with |
| Kazandi et al. ( | Retrospective prevalence study on 82 women with vulvar | 15 cases of thyroid disease were observed (18.2% of patients) |
| Birenbaum and Young ( | Retrospective prevalence study on 211 women with vulvar | 63 cases of AITD were observed (29.9% of patients). Prevalence of AITD was higher among patients aged less than 55 years [25/74 (33.8%)] than those aged 55 years or more [38/137 (27.7%)] |
| Kantere et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 100 patients with | No patients with thyroid disease, five with mild abnormality of thyroid function: low levels of T4 and raised levels of TSH in two cases, normal T4 and raised TSH in two other cases, normal T4 and decreased TSH in one |
| Hagedorn et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 102 patients (60 females, 42 males) with | AITD was found in 39% of females and 12.5% of males |
| Ebrahimi et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 120 patients (89 females, 31 males) with mucosal | AITD was found in 11/120 patients (9.2%) |
| Chang et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 500 patients with desquamative gingivitis, 287 with erosive oral | 455 patients with desquamative gingivitis were affected by erosive oral |
| Chang et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 320 patients with oral | Anti-Tg and antithyroid microsomal antibodies were found in 21.3 and 24.4% of patients. TSH levels were normal in 85.8% of the 190 patients, positive for one or both thyroid autoantibodies, below normal in 4.2% and above normal in 10% |
| Carrozzo et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 50 patients with oral | Antithyroid antibodies were found in 10% of patients |
| Lavaee and Majd ( | Retrospective prevalence study on 523 patients with oral | Hypothyroid subjects were 35 among patients (6.7%) and 21 among controls (4%); this difference was not statistically significant |
| Azurdia et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 58 males affected by | |
| Aslanian et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on three families (30 subjects in total) with familial | 8 cases of |
The type of lichen studied in each paper is written in boldface.
AITD, autoimmune thyroid disease; LP, lichen planus; LS, lichen sclerosus; T4, thyroxine; Tg, thyroglobulin; TPO, thyroid peroxidase; TSH, thyroid stimulating hormone; HLA, human leukocyte antigen.
Studies reporting clinical and/or laboratory data about subjects affected by AITD who were found positive for lichen.
| Reference, | Type of study and population | Main findings |
|---|---|---|
| Soy et al. ( | Cross-sectional study on 65 patients (56 females, 9 males) with AITD | Oral |
| Bra˘nis¸teanu et al. ( | Retrospective prevalence study on 38 patients (36 Females, 2 males) with thyroid diseases (63% autoimmune thyroiditis, 26.3% polynodular goiter, 10.7% hypothyroidism) | |
The type of lichen studied in each paper is written in boldface.
AITD, autoimmune thyroid disease, LP, lichen planus.