| Literature DB >> 29071428 |
Ariadne Hadjikyriacou Saniklidou1, Patrick J Tighe1, Lucy C Fairclough1, Ian Todd2.
Abstract
Bullous pemphigoid (BP) is the most common autoimmune skin disease of blistering character. The underlying pathophysiological mechanism involves an immune attack, usually by IgG class autoantibodies, on the autoantigen BP 180/BPAg2, which is a type XVII collagen (COL17) protein acting as the adhesion molecule between the epidermis and the basement membrane of the dermis. About 40 years ago, following consistent findings of elevated total serum IgE levels in BP patients, it was hypothesized that IgE may be involved in the pathophysiology of BP. Our objective was to determine whether there is strong evidence for an association between IgE class autoantibodies and the clinical severity or phenotype of BP. Three databases were searched for relevant studies and appropriate exclusion and inclusion criteria were applied. Data was extracted and assessed in relation to the study questions concerning the clinical significance of IgE autoantibodies in BP. Nine studies found that anti-BP180 autoantibodies of IgE class are associated with increased severity of BP, whereas two studies did not find such an association. The number of studies which found an association between higher IgE autoantibody levels and the erythematous urticarial phenotype of BP (5) was equal in number to the studies which found no such association (5). In conclusion, higher serum IgE autoantibody levels are associated with more severe clinical manifestations of BP. There is insufficient evidence to support higher IgE autoantibody levels being associated with specific clinical phenotypes of BP.Entities:
Keywords: Autoantibodies; BP; Bullous pemphigoid; Clinical manifestations; Clinical phenotype; Disease activity; Disease course; Disease severity; IgE; Immunoglobulin E
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29071428 PMCID: PMC5754504 DOI: 10.1007/s00403-017-1789-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dermatol Res ISSN: 0340-3696 Impact factor: 3.017
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram used to illustrate the study selection process for the systematic review. This shows the process of searching for records, removing duplicates, screening titles and abstracts, assessing full texts for eligibility and selecting which studies would be used in the analysis
Fig. 2The number of studies published each year between 1974 and 2016 relevant to the relationship between IgE autoantibodies and BP
Summary of the data extracted from the primary full articles used in assessing the association of IgE with the severity and clinical phenotype of BP
| First author [Ref] | Year | Journal of publication | Type of article | Study design | Setting details | Sample size | Patient demographics | Description of BP diagnosis criteria present | Comorbidities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | |||||||||
| Döpp et al. [ | 2000 | J Am Acad Dermatol | Journal article | Cohort | Single centre; University of Würzburg | 18 | 11 males and 7 females; range of age 50–91 years and a median of 72 | No | Not discussed |
| Cozzani et al. [ | 2001 | J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol | Journal article | Cohort | Multi-centre; The Dermatologic Clinic of the University of Genoa and the Division of Dermatology of S. Martino, Galliera, Sampierdarena, Imperia, Savona and La Spezia Hospitals | 32 | 13 males and 19 females; range of age 45–92 years and a mean age of 74 | Yes | Discussed |
| Kelly et al. [ | 2007 | J Allergy Clin Immunol | Meeting Abstract | Not clear | Single-centre; University of Utah | 140 and 48 | No information | No | Not discussed |
| Ishiura et al. [ | 2008 | J Dermatol Sci | Journal Article | Case–Control | Multi-centre; University of Tokyo Hospital and Kanazawa University Hospital | 67 | 35 males and 32 females; range of age 17–93 years and mean of 72.4 | Yes | No comorbidities that could affect serum IgE or eosinophil levels |
| Iwata et al. [ | 2008 | Arch Dermatol | Jounral Article | Retrospective case series analysis | Single-centre; Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Science, Department of Dermatology | 37 | 18 males and 19 females; mean age of 75 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Messingham et al. [ | 2009 | J Immunol Methods | Journal Article | Cohort | Single-centre; University of Iowa | 43 | No information | Yes | Not discussed |
| Yayli et al. [ | 2011 | Br J Dermatol | Journal Article | Retrospective study | None provided | 44 | 23 males and 21 females; range of age 46–94 years and a mean age of 76.5 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Messingham et al. [ | 2014 | PLoS One | Journal Article | Case–control study | Single-centre; University of Iowa | 48 | 25 males and 23 females; range of age 59–97 years and a mean of 78.2 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Moriuchi et al. [ | 2015 | J Dermatol Sci | Journal Article | Retrospective study | Single-centre; Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology | 100 | 47 males and 53 females; range of age 41–99 years and a mean age of 72.2 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Ma et al. [ | 2015 | J Dermatol Sci | Letter to Editor | Case–control | Single-centre; University Hospital in China (name not mentioned) | 41 | 19 males and 22 females; mean age of 69.37 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Bing et al. [ | 2015 | Arch Dermatol Res | Journal Article | Case–control | Single-centre; Hospital in China (name not mentioned) | 37 | 21 males and 16 females; range of age 29–93 and a mean of 69.08 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Kalowska et al. [ | 2016 | Acta Derm Venereol | Journal Article | Retrospective study | Medical University of Warsaw, Department of Dermatology | 77 | 22 males and 55 females; range of age 56–97 years with a mean of 78.6 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Cho et al. [ | 2016 | J Dermatol Sci | Letter to Editor | Retrospective study | Single-centre; National Taiwan University Hospital | 17 | 9 males and 8 females; range of age 11–77 years and a mean age of 72 | Yes | Not discussed |
| Hashimoto et al. [ | 2016 | Br J Dermatol | Journal Article | Retrospective study | Single-centre; Kurume University | 36 | 8 males and 28 females; range of age 1–90 years and a mean age of 63.6 | Yes | Not discussed |
| van Beek et al. [ | 2016 | JAMA Dermatol | Journal Article | Cohort study | Single-centre; University clinic of Lübeck | 153 (Cohort 1: 65, Cohort 2: 52, Cohort 3: 36) | Cohort 1 (underwent ELISA for IgE BP180 NC16A aabs): 25 males and 40 females, mean age of 74.6 years; Cohort 2 (underwent BPDAI clinical evaluation): 23 males and 29 females and a mean age of 78.2 years; Cohort 3 (negative for anti-BP180 NC16A IgG and underwent evaluation of the diagnostic importance of serum anti-BP180 IgE): 22 males and 14 females and a mean age of 74.5 years | Yes | Not discussed |
The number of studies indicating that a specific parameter of IgE can or cannot affect the disease severity/activity of BP [Refs]
| Direct correlation with anti-BP180 IgE aabs | No correlation with anti-BP180 IgE aabs | Direct correlation with anti-BP230 IgE aabs | No correlation with anti-BP230 IgE aabs | Direct correlation with total serum IgE | No correlation with total serum IgE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disease severity/activity | 9 [ | 2 [ | 0 | 4 [ | 3 [ | 1 [ |
The number of studies reporting that a specific parameter of IgE can or cannot affect the clinical manifestation (phenotype) of BP [Refs]
| Correlation with anti-BP180 IgE aabs | No correlation with anti-BP180 IgE aabs | Correlation with anti-BP230 IgE aabs | No correlation with anti-BP230 IgE aabs | Correlation with unspecified IgE aabs | Correlation with total serum IgE | No correlation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bullous | 0 | 2 [ | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 [ | 0 |
| Urticarial Erythematous | 2 [ | 3 [ | 1 [ | 1 [ | 1 [ | 0 | 1 [ |
| Bullous/erythematous | 0 | 1 [ | 0 | 1 [ | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Nodular | 2 [ | 0 | 2 [ | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |