Affiliation:
1. Department of Dermatology Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands
2. Department of Research Netherlands Comprehensive Cancer Organization (IKNL) Utrecht The Netherlands
3. Department of Dermatology University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA
4. Department of Non‐communicable Disease Epidemiology London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK
5. Department of Population Health Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK
6. Health Data Research UK London UK
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundLymphocyte skin homing in atopic eczema (AE) may induce lymphopenia.ObjectiveTo determine if AE is associated with lymphopenia.MethodsWe used UK primary care electronic health records (Clinical Practice Research Datalink GOLD) for a matched cohort study in adults (18 years+) (1997–2015) with at least one recorded lymphocyte count. We matched people with AE to up to five people without. We used multivariable logistic regression to estimate the association between AE and lymphopenia (two low lymphocyte counts within 3 months) and linear mixed effects regression to estimate the association with absolute lymphocyte counts using all available counts. Cox proportional hazard models were used to investigate the effect of lymphopenia on common infections. We replicated the study using US survey data (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey [NHANES]).ResultsAmong 71,731 adults with AE and 126,349 adults without AE, we found an adjusted odds ratio (OR) for lymphopenia of 1.16 (95% CI: 1.09–1.23); the strength of association increased with increasing eczema severity. When comparing all recorded lymphocyte counts from adults with AE (n = 1,497,306) to those of people without AE (n = 4,035,870) we saw a lower mean lymphocyte (adjusted mean difference −0.047 × 109/L [95% CI: −0.051 to −0.043]) in those with AE. The difference was larger for men, with increasing age, and with increasing AE severity and was present among people with AE not treated with immunosuppressive drugs. In NHANES (n = 22,624), the adjusted OR for lymphopenia in adults with AE was 1.30 (95% CI: 0.80–2.11), and the adjusted mean lymphocyte count difference was −0.03 × 109/L (95% CI: −0.07 to 0.02). Despite having a lower lymphocyte count, adjusting for time with lymphopenia, did not alter risk estimates of infections.ConclusionAtopic eczema, including increasing AE severity, is associated with a decreased lymphocyte count, regardless of immunosuppressive drug use. Whether the lower lymphocyte count has wider health implications for people with severe eczema warrants further investigation.
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Dermatology
Cited by
3 articles.
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