4.5 Article

Anxiety and depression in keratotic oral lichen planus: a multicentric study from the SIPMO

Journal

CLINICAL ORAL INVESTIGATIONS
Volume 27, Issue 6, Pages 3057-3069

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00784-023-04909-3

Keywords

Keratotic oral lichen planus; Depression; Anxiety; Mood disorder; Pain

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This study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of anxiety and depression in patients with keratotic reticular, papular, and/or plaque-like lesions (K-OLP) and analyze potential predictors affecting mental health. The results showed that K-OLP patients had higher scores on various scales compared to the healthy control group, indicating poorer mental health.
ObjectivesOral lichen planus with exclusive keratotic reticular, papular, and/or plaque-like lesions (K-OLP) is a clinical pattern of OLP that may be associated with a complex symptomatology and psychological alteration. The aim of the study was to evaluate the prevalence of anxiety (A) and depression (D) in patients with K-OLP, analyzing the potential predictors which can affect mental health status.MethodsThree hundred K-OLP patients versus 300 healthy controls (HC) were recruited in 15 Italian universities. The Numeric Rating Scale (NRS), Total Pain Rating Index (T-PRI), and Hamilton Rating Scales for Depression and for Anxiety (HAM-D and HAM-A) were administered.ResultsThe K-OLP patients showed statistically higher scores in the NRS, T-PRI, HAM-D, and HAM-A compared with the HC (p-value < 0.001*). A and D were found in 158 (52.7%) and 148 (49.3%) K-OLP patients. Strong linear correlations were identified between HAM-A, HAM-D, NRS, T-PRI, and employment status and between HAM-D, HAM-A, NRS, T-PRI, employment status, and female gender. Multivariate logistic regression revealed that HAM-D and HAM-A showed the greatest increase in the R2 value for A and D in the K-OLP patients, respectively (DR2 = 55.5% p-value < 0.001**; DR2 = 56.5% p-value < 0.001**).ConclusionsThe prevalence of A and D is higher in the K-OLP patients compared with the HC, also found in K-OLP subjects without pain, suggesting that the processing of pain may be in a certain way independent of the processing of mood.

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