Conference Coverage

EADV: Hidradenitis suppurativa carries high cardiovascular risk


 

AT THE EADV CONGRESS

References

COPENHAGEN – Hidradenitis suppurativa, a common, chronic, inflammatory scarring skin disease of the hair follicles, is a red flag signaling elevated levels of multiple cardiovascular risk factors, according to a systematic review and meta-analysis.

“The need for screening of hidradenitis suppurativa patients for modifiable cardiovascular risk is emphasized,” Dr. Thrasyvoulos Tzellos said in presenting the findings at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.

For such a common and dramatically destructive disease, hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) was underresearched until recently. Investigative interest grew as the tumor necrosis factor inhibitor adalimumab (Humira) underwent development as a novel therapy for what has been traditionally a notoriously difficult to treat disease. The biologic agent received Food and Drug Administration marketing approval in October as the first and only approved treatment for HS.

Dr. Tzellos’s meta-analysis included nine published studies totaling 6,174 HS patients and 24,993 controls. Five studies were case control, and the other four were cross sectional. An indicator of the recent explosive research interest in HS can be seen in the fact that 80% of all the HS patients included in the meta-analysis come from two studies published within just the last year, one from Massachusetts General Hospital (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2014 Dec;71[6]:1144-50) and the other from Israel (Br J Dermatol. 2015 Aug;173[2]:464-70).

Not all the studies examined the same cardiovascular risk factors. For example, only six of nine studies looked at diabetes mellitus as an endpoint. Of those studies that did, diabetes occurred in 856 of 5,685 HS patients, a rate 2.85-fold higher than in controls, according to Dr. Tzellos of University Hospital of North Norway in Troms.

The only cardiovascular risk factor examined that was not significantly more common among patients with HS than controls was hypertension. The 1.57-fold increased likelihood of hypertension among HS patients didn’t achieve statistical significance.

Although patients whose HS was treated exclusively in outpatient settings had significantly higher levels of cardiovascular risk factors than did controls, risk levels were consistently higher still in patients who had been hospitalized for HS.

A meta-analysis such as this cannot address causality, leaving open the question of whether increased cardiovascular risk factors are intrinsic to HS, or the debilitating recurrent skin disease causes affected patients to take a defeatest attitude toward maintenance of a healthy lifestyle.

Dr. Tzellos reported having no financial conflicts regarding this meta-analysis, carried out with academic funding.

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