Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Epidemiology & Clinical Trial Unit Children's Hospital of Fudan University & National Children Medical Center Shanghai China
2. Department of Research & Development Pigeon Maternal and Infant Skin Care Research Institute Shanghai China
3. Department of Dermatology Children's Hospital of Fudan University & National Children Medical Center Shanghai China
4. Shanghai Minhang Maternal and Children Health Care Hospital Shanghai China
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundTrajectories of stratum corneum (SC) lipid subclasses and their associations with infant atopic dermatitis (AD) are unclear. This study aimed to quantify the trajectories of 15 SC subclasses and carbon chain lengths and their associations with AD within 12 months.MethodsIn total, 213 newborns were enrolled at birth with nonlesional skin samples collected from the inner forearm at birth, 42 days, 3, 6, and 12 months, respectively. Lesional skin samples were collected from 120 AD patients at clinic with the disease onset within the first year of life. Mass spectrometry was applied to assess relative contents of 12 ceramide (CER), three free fatty acid (FFA) subclasses, and average carbon chain length (CCL). AD incident within 1 year old was diagnosed by dermatologists according to UK criteria.ResultsSixty‐four (30.0%) cases of ADs occurred in the cohort. All SC lipid subclasses and CCLs, but EOP varied significantly during the first year. AD infants showed lower NP but higher NS, NH, AP, hydroxy FFA, and CCL of FFAs compared with nonaffected infants. After normalization by age, the differences remained and were more pronounced in lesional skin of clinical AD infants compared with non‐ADs. NS, NH, and CCL of FFAs in lesional skin of AD infants showed positive and significant correlations with the levels of transepidermal water loss at 3 month; some evidence supports a negative correlation for NP.ConclusionsWe provide an overview of developmental trajectories of 15 CER and FFA subclasses across the first year of healthy infants and a link between the imbalance of some subclasses with the development of AD.
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
2 articles.
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