4.4 Article

Association between atopic dermatitis and serious cutaneous, multiorgan and systemic infections in US adults

Journal

ANNALS OF ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 120, Issue 1, Pages 66-+

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.anai.2017.10.019

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [K12 HS023011]
  2. Dermatology Foundation
  3. American Medical Association Foundation
  4. AGENCY FOR HEALTHCARE RESEARCH AND QUALITY [K12HS023011] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is associated with barrier disruption, immune dysregulation, and immunosuppressing treatments that can increase the association with an unusual number of infections. Objective: To determine whether adults with AD have an unusually large number of serious infections and related outcomes. Methods: Data from the 2002 to 2012 National Inpatient Sample were analyzed, including an approximately 20% sample of all US hospitalizations (n = 72,108,077 adults). Prevalence of serious infections in hospitalized patients with vs without AD, length of stay, cost of care, and inpatient mortality secondary to serious infections were determined. Results: The prevalence of serious infections expressed as a percentage (95% confidence interval) was higher in adults hospitalized with than in those without AD (42.1% [41.6-42.6] vs 25.4% [25.2-25.6]; P = .0002). In logistic regression models with multiple predictors (multivariable logistic regression models), AD was associated with 32 of 38 infections examined. Associated cutaneous infections included eczema herpeticum (odds ratio [95% confidence interval] adjusted for other predictors: 67.93 [47.93-96.28]), erysipelas (11.15 [9.47-13.1]), and cellulitis (4.53 [4.42-4.64]). Associated respiratory infections included aspergillosis (1.51 [1.21-1.88]) and tuberculosis (1.57 [1.41-1.76]). AD was associated with extracutaneous, multiorgan, and systemic infections, including infectious arthropathy (2.01 [1.84-2.20]), endocarditis (1.25 [1.12-1.39]), encephalitis (1.65 [1.40-1.96]), and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections (3.29 [3.17-3.42]). Patients with AD hospitalized with vs without any serious infection had an increased geometric mean cost of inpatient care ($8,273 [8,126-8,423] vs $7,179 [7,052-7,307]) and length of stay (5.3 days [5.2-5.3] vs 3.9 [3.9-4.0]; P = .0002), with $11 to $228 million excess annual costs from hospitalization with serious infections in adults with AD. Conclusion: Adults with AD had increased cutaneous, respiratory, multiorgan, and systemic infections, which were associated with a considerable cost burden. (C) 2017 American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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