artículo
Association between obesity and atopic dermatitis in children: A case-control study in a high obesity prevalence population
Fecha
2022Registro en:
10.1111/pde.15110
1525-1470
0736-8046
WOS:000849754600001
Autor
Iturriaga, Carolina
Bustos, María Francisca
Le Roy, Catalina
Rodríguez, Rocío
Cifuentes, Lorena
Silva-Valenzuela, Sergio
Vera-Kellet, Cristián
Cristi, Francisca
Pérez-Mateluna, Guillermo
Cabalín, Carolina
Hoyos-Bachiloglu, Rodrigo
Camargo Jr., Carlos A.
Borzutzky Schachter, Arturo
Institución
Resumen
Background/Objective: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease. Research suggests an association between obesity and AD, although evidence is lacking from Latin American populations. This study evaluated the association of obesity with AD in children from Chile, a country with high obesity prevalence. Methods: A case-control study was performed in children with active AD (cases) and healthy controls (HCs) from Santiago, Chile. Body mass index was evaluated by z-score (z-BMI), with overweight defined as z-BMI ≥+1 and <+2, and obesity as z-BMI ≥+2. Abdominal obesity was defined by a waist circumference-to-height ratio (WHR) ≥0.5. AD severity was evaluated by Scoring AD (SCORAD) index. Results: A total of 174 children with AD and 101 controls were included. AD patients had similar overweight (27% vs. 28%) and obesity (21% vs. 26%) rates as HCs (p = .65). Abdominal obesity rates were also comparable (64% vs. 62%, p = .81). In sex-specific analyses, girls with AD had higher abdominal obesity rates than HCs (71% vs. 53%, p < .05) while boys with AD had lower abdominal obesity rates than HCs (53% vs. 75%, p = .03). Among children with AD, higher z-BMI or WHR did not correlate with higher SCORAD, eosinophil counts or total IgE. Conclusion: In our study, Chilean children with AD had high but similar rates of obesity as HCs, but showed sex-specific associations of abdominal obesity and AD. Further research is needed to evaluate these associations and the roles that weight excess and weight loss could play in the pathogenesis and treatment of AD.