Acta Dermato-Venereologica 97-4 | Page 25
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SHORT COMMUNICATION
Psoriatic Arthritis, but not Psoriasis, is Associated with Primary Adrenal Insufficiency
Peter JENSEN 1 , Alexander EGEBERG 1 , Jacob P. THYSSEN 1 , Gunnar GISLASON 2 and Lone SKOV 1
Department of Dermato-Allergology, and 2 Department of Cardiology, Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Kildegårdsvej 28,
DK-2900 Hellerup, Denmark. E-mail: [email protected]
1
Accepted Dec 15, 2016; Epub ahead of print Dec 16, 2016
Psoriasis is a prevalent, chronic systemic inflammatory
skin disease, affecting approximately 2–3% of the gene-
ral population; more than 125 million people worldwide
(1). While 6–40% of patients with psoriasis develop pso-
riasis arthritis (PsA), psoriasis has also been associated
with a host of autoimmune diseases, including vitiligo,
multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory
bowel disease; partly explained by shared genetic risk
variants (2–4). Recently, we conducted a nationwide
cohort study in Denmark, and showed that the incidence
rate ratio for autoimmune hepatitis was increased 2–3-
fold in persons with psoriasis (5). In 2012, Wu et al. (4),
conducted a retrospective cohort study including 25,341
individuals with psoriasis and/or PsA and showed that
patients with psoriasis were more likely to have at least 2
other autoimmune diseases compared with healthy con-
trols. Given the associations between psoriatic disease
and a number of autoimmune conditions, an increased
prevalence of psoriatic disease among members of the
Danish National Addison’s Disease Advocacy group
(unpublished observation), and the limited available
data on the association between primary adrenal insuf-
ficiency (PAI) and psoriasis, we con ducted a nationwide
case-control study to examine a potential association
between these conditions.
METHODS
Study approval was obtained from the Danish Data Protection
Agency (ref. 2007-58-0015, int. ref. GEH-2014-018, I-Suite
02736). Review by an ethics committee is not required for regis-
ter studies in Denmark. Conduct of this study was in accordance
with the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in
Epidemiology recommendations (6).
The Danish National Health Service provides universal tax-
supported healthcare, guaranteeing unrestricted access to general
practitioners and hospitals and partial reimbursement for pres-
cribed medications. Information on date of birth, sex, and date
of death are available from the Civil Personal Register (7). The
Danish National Patient Register contains data on admission and
discharge dates and discharge diagnoses from all non-psychiatric
hospitals since 1977 and on emergency room and outpatient clinic
visits since 1995 (8). The International Classification of Diseases
(ICD)-8 codes were used until the end of 1993. From 1994, the
Danish adaptation of ICD-10 was implemented, whereas ICD-9
was never used in Denmark. Statistics Denmark records informa-
tion on tax-reported household income (9).
All Danish patients with a first-time hospital diagnosis of pri-
mary adrenal insufficiency (ICD-10 codes E27.1A and E27.2)
between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 2012 were identified.
Each case was matched on age, sex, and date of diagnosis with 5
healthy controls. That is, control subjects had to be alive, resident
in the source population, and at risk for first hospital admission for
PAI at the time the corresponding case was diagnosed. We defined
the index date of control subjects as the date of first PAI diagnosis
for the corresponding case. Using this risk set sampling design,
the case-control odds ratio (OR) provides an unbiased estimate of
the corresponding incidence rate ratio. We identified all patients in
this cohort with psoriasis and PsA. Patients were classified with
severe disease when they received systemic anti-psoriatic therapy
consistent with severe disease (biological drugs, cyclosporine,
psoralens, retinoids, or methotrexate). We have previously descri-
bed and validated the method for identification of psoriasis, and
classification of severity, with a sensitivity of 98% (10).
SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc. Cary, NC, USA) and STATA
version 11.2 (StataCorp, College Station, TX, USA) were used to
compute case-control ORs with 95% confidence intervals (95%
CIs), based on conditional logistic regression (11). This model
inherently adjusts for the matched factors, and we also adjusted
the models for differences in socio-economic status and smoking
history, respectively. Socio-economic status was calculated as an
index between 0 and 4 based on the average gross annual income
(standardized by age) during a 5-year period before the index date.
A 2-tailed p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
RESULTS
The study population included 1,199 individuals with PAI
and 5,995 matched control subjects between 1 January
1997 and 31 December 2012 (65% women and mean
age 52.8 years in both groups). Smoking was twice as
common in PAI as in control subjects (15.4% vs. 7.8%,
but the mean socioeconomic status was similar (1.9 vs.
2.0). In individuals with PAI, the adjusted ORs were 1.28
(0.83–1.96, p = 0.261) for any psoriasis (psoriasis regard-
less of severity) without PsA, 1.14 (0.38–3.44, p = 0.809)
for severe psoriasis without PsA, 3.48 (1.54–7.81,
p = 0.003) for PsA only, and 2.2 (1.07–4.52, p = 0.032) for
severe psoriasis with or without PsA (Table I). When we
examined the temporal relationship, i.e. whether psoriatic
disease preceded PAI, or vice versa, fully adjusted ORs
of pre-existing psoriasis were 1.64 (1.08–2.49, p = 0.021),
whereas the OR of psoriasis onset after PAI was 1.22
(0.53–2.83, p = 0.636), as shown in Table II.
DISCUSSION
In this population-based study, PAI was significantly as-
sociated with pre-existing PsA, but not psoriasis, when
compared with matched controls. The explanation for
the association is unclear, but a potential mechanistic
link could be mediated by dysregulated tissue resident
memory T cells (T RM ), which reside long-term in pe-
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license. www.medicaljournals.se/acta
Journal Compilation © 2017 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.
doi: 10.2340/00015555-2603
Acta Derm Venereol 2017; 97: 519–521