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Atopic Dermatitis: A Global Health Perspective
abstract
This abstract is available on the publisher's site.
Access this abstract nowThe International Society of AD (ISAD) organized a roundtable on global aspects of AD at the WCD 2023 in Singapore. According to the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) consortium, at least 171 million individuals were affected with AD in 2019, corresponding to 2.23% of the world population, with age-standardized prevalence and incidence rates that were relatively stable from 1990 to 2019. Based on the panel experience, most AD cases are mild-to-moderate. Without parallel data on disease prevalence and severity, the GBD data are difficult to interpret in many regions. This gap is particularly important in countries with limited medical infrastructure, but indirect evidence suggests a significant burden of AD in low-and-medium resource settings, especially urban areas. The Singapore roundtable was an opportunity to compare experiences in World Bank category 1 (Madagascar and Mali), 3 (Brazil, China) and 4 (Australia, Germany, Qatar, USA, Singapore, Japan) countries. The panel concluded that current AD guidelines are not adapted for low resource settings and a more pragmatic approach, as developed by WHO for skin NTDs, would be advisable for minimal access to moisturizers and topical corticosteroids. The panel also recommended prioritizing prevention studies, regardless of the level of existing resources. For disease long-term control in World Bank category 3 and most category 4 countries, the main problem is not access to drugs for most mild-to-moderate cases, but rather poor compliance due to insufficient time at visits. Collaboration with WHO, patient advocacy groups and industry may promote global change, improve capacity training and fight current inequalities. Finally, optimizing management of AD and its comorbidities needs more action at the primary care level, because reaching specialist care is merely aspirational in most settings. Primary care empowerment with store and forward telemedicine and algorithms based on augmented intelligence is a future goal.
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Atopic dermatitis: A global health perspective
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2023 Dec 27;[EPub Ahead of Print], O Faye, C Flohr, K Kabashima, L Ma, AS Paller, FR Rapelanoro, M Steinhoff, JC Su, R Takaoka, A Wollenberg, YW Yew, JAR Postigo, P Schmid-Grendelmeier, A TaïebFrom MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
In dermatology, we frequently take a microcosmic view of skin diseases — even the common ones — simply based on our practice environment. However, an inflammatory dermatosis as chronic, burdensome, and prevalent as atopic dermatitis (AD; affecting 2.23% of the world population based on 2019 data from the Global Burden of Disease consortium!) deserves a broader perspective. On the heels of the recent 2023 World Congress of Dermatology held in Singapore, members of the International Society of Atopic Dermatitis came together to discuss global aspects of AD. Beyond reviewing the global estimates of prevalence and distribution of disease severity (based on various sampling-based cross-sectional designs) as well as phenotypic variations in disease presentation, the group took an in-depth look at inequalities and disparities in healthcare and medication access. Even with the therapeutic revolution we have witnessed with AD, much of the world has limited choices in novel therapies due to a variety of local factors that go beyond simple medication availability. In addition, while the approach to specialized care remains heterogeneous around the world, primary care remains critical, yet generally undertrained, when it comes to AD in most countries.
What is the bottom line? As currently structured, our guidelines for AD are not designed with a global perspective in mind. Codified efforts are needed among clinicians, industry, patients, and advocacy organizations to design the right approaches for research design, medication access, education, and standardized care practices.