Pediatric Hidradenitis Suppurativa: A Cross-Sectional Study on Clinical Features and Treatment Approaches

Author:

Garcovich Simone12ORCID,Fania Luca3,Caposiena Dante4,Giovanardi Giulia12,Chiricozzi Andrea12,De Simone Clara12,Tartaglia Chiara4,Ciccone Davide3,Bianchi Luca4,Abeni Damiano5,Peris Ketty12

Affiliation:

1. Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Dermatologia, Rome, Italy

2. Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Dermatologia, Rome, Italy

3. Dermatology Department, IDI-IRCCS, Rome, Italy

4. Dermatology Department, Department of Systems Medicine, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy

5. Clinical Epidemiology Unit, IDI-IRCCS, Rome, Italy

Abstract

Background Hidradenitis suppurativa is uncommon in patients of pediatric age, and differentiation with adult-onset disease is controversial. Treatment of pediatric hidradenitis suppurativa is scarcely standardized, and specific guidelines are lacking. Objective We report the clinical features, relevant risk-factors, comorbidity profile, and treatment patterns of a hospital-based cohort of pediatric hidradenitis suppurativa Methods In a cross-sectional study data on patients’ demographics, disease-specific characteristics, early/pre-pubertal onset of disease, comorbidities, and treatment management were retrieved. Reference population data and clinical data from the national hidradenitis suppurativa disease registry were used for comparison. Results From a database of 870 patients with hidradenitis, 71 (15 males and 56 females) patients aged <18 years (mean age: 15.3 years; range 8-17 years), with mild (Hurley I, 45.1%) and moderate-severe disease (Hurley II-III, 54.9%), were retrieved. Smoking (23.9%) and overweight/obese frequencies (59.2%) were higher than reference population standards. Patient’s older age at baseline (OR 1.43, 95% CI: 1.01 to 2.02) and higher BMI (OR 1.26, 95% CI: 1.07–1.48) were the only factors associated with moderate-severe disease. Family history and early/pre-pubertal onset of disease were not associated with severity or extent of disease. Sebaceous-follicular comorbid conditions were associated with cigarette smoking ( P = .002). Among 81 treatment courses, clindamycin-based and zinc-sulphate-based combination regimens were most frequently used (59.3%). Female preponderance, family history of disease and extensive involvement were significantly different from the general hidradenitis suppurativa population. Conclusions Pediatric hidradenitis suppurativa presents a clinical spectrum comparable to adult-onset disease. Increased preventive measures should target obesity and smoking in this population.

Funder

FL, CD, and AD were supported, in part, by the “Progetto Ricerca Corrente - 2019” of the Italian Ministry of Health, Rome, Italy.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Dermatology,Surgery

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