Conference Coverage

Study finds AD accounts for hundreds of thousands of annual ED visits


 

REPORTING FROM AAD 18

The study did not examine what medications were prescribed in the ED. However, Dr. Silverberg said, “my anecdotal experience has been that many AD patients are prescribed systemic steroids by nondermatologists in the [ED] setting. While these are rapidly effective, they typically have short-lived efficacy and result in rebound flares upon cessation. Patients are rarely counseled on appropriate skin care techniques or given long-term treatment approaches in the [ED] setting, which fails to achieve adequate long-term disease control.”

What’s next? “We are now studying how AD severity, disease course, and treatment impact [ED] utilization for AD,” Dr. Silverberg said.

No specific study funding was reported. He and Ms. Kwa report no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Silverberg, J et al. Poster 7021.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Mobile Medical Apps for Patient Education: A Graded Review of Available Dermatology Apps
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: Off-label dupilumab finding a home in pediatric AD
MDedge Dermatology
‘Cutting for Stone’ author closes out this year’s AAD plenary session
MDedge Dermatology
Late-breaking research presented at AAD on Saturday February 17
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: Select atopic dermatitis patients need patch testing
MDedge Dermatology
Upadacitinib calms itch, clears skin in moderate to severe atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology
Anti–IL-33 antibody stakes a first-in-class claim on moderate to severe atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: With new therapies available, it’s the ‘decade of eczema,’ researcher says
MDedge Dermatology
Dual kinase inhibitor performs well in its first safety, efficacy study for atopic dermatitis
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: Cannabinoids in dermatology
MDedge Dermatology