Acta Dermato-Venereologica issue 50:1 98-1CompleteContent | Page 51
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CORRESPONDENCE
Psoriasis is More Prevalent than Indicated by Egeberg et al.’s Danish Study: A Comment
Petter GJERSVIK
Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Department of Dermatology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway
In the July 2017 issue of Acta Dermato-Venereologica,
Egeberg et al. (1) reported a 2.2% prevalence of psoriasis
in Denmark. Their study is based on data from patients
of all ages diagnosed with psoriasis as inpatients or
outpatients at Danish hospitals, supplemented by data
on pharmacy-dispensed psoriasis-specific medication.
Persons who were not treated by hospital dermatolo-
gists and/or had not been prescribed psoriasis-specific
medication, i.e. presumably those with less severe
psoriasis and those in long-term remission, do not ap-
pear to be included in their analyses. This limitation
is not sufficiently discussed in the article, despite the
well-documented fact that the majority of psoriasis
cases are mild and many cases are undiagnosed (2, 3).
By restricting their analyses to the chosen cohort, the
authors have probably underestimated the true preva-
lence of psoriasis in Denmark.
Egeberg et al. (1) state that a psoriasis prevalence of
2.2% is comparable to recent studies in other Scandi-
navian countries. In contrast, Danielsen et al. (4) found
a prevalence of self-reported psoriasis among adults of
4.8% and 11.4% in Tromsø, Norway, in 1979 to 1980
and 2007 to 2008, respectively. Using a similar ques-
tionnaire and study design, Modalsli et al. (3) found
the prevalence of self-reported psoriasis among adults
in Nord-Trøndelag County, Norway, in 2006 to 2008 to
be 5.8%. In order to validate their questionnaire, 110
study participants with, and 434 without, self-reported
psoriasis were examined clinically by experienced
dermatologists. Using a strict gold standard definition
of psoriasis, they found a positive predictive value of
self-reported psoriasis of 78% (increasing to 84% when
the psoriasis question was combined with an additional
question “Have you been diagnosed with psoriasis by a
dermatologist?”) and a negative predictive value of 96%.
The validation-based prevalence of psoriasis in adults
was then estimated to be 8.0% (3).
Egeberg et al. (1) did not compare their study with
these recent Scandinavian studies among adults sug-
gesting a higher prevalence of psoriasis.
Reply to the Comment by Petter Gjersvik
Alexander EGEBERG and Lone SKOV
Department of Dermatology and Allergy, Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Kildegårdsvej 28, DK-2900 Hellerup,
Denmark. E-mail: [email protected]
Gjersvik comments that the prevalence of psoriasis
may be considerably underestimated in our study (1),
and compares our estimate of prevalence with that of
the HUNT and Tromsø studies in Norway (3, 4). We
agree that the prevalence of psoriasis in the different
Scandinavian studies varies and is often higher in ques-
tionnaire-based studies. The 2 afore-mentioned studies
from Norway are questionnaire-based studies and ours
is a register-based study.
The Danish National Patient Register (5), from which
part of our data derives, contains not only information on
all visits to hospital clinics, but also data on a number of
private clinics (including dermatologists) in Denmark.
While we agree that additional inclusion of psoriasis-
specific medication, which is used in the majority
(73.5–93.9%) of patients with psoriasis (6, 7) may not
identify patients with mild psoriasis who are untreated
(and undiagnosed) and patients treated exclusively with
topical corticosteroids, this issue was in fact discussed in
our article (1). Moreover, in order to thoroughly address
this potential bias, we performed additional analyses to
assess the prevalence when considering unidentified
subjects with psoriasis. These data were also presented in
the original manuscript and showed an estimate of 2.8%.
A recent study (8) from the UK, which utilized data
collected from general practitioners, reported an overall
prevalence of psoriasis of 2.8%, which is comparable to
the overall prevalence of 2.2% in our study (1).
In our study, the prevalence of psoriasis ranged from
0.4% to 4.8% depending on the age group. On the other
hand, the HUNT study (3), which Gjersvik refers to,
displayed a self-reported prevalence of 5.8%. These
subjects had a mean age of 55.2 years. Thus, we reported
a prevalence of 3.4% among patients aged 50–59 years.
According to the supplementary materials of the afore-
mentioned publication (3) the HUNT study had a response
rate of only 54.1% (50,806 responded of the 93,860 who
were invited). Indeed, it is likely that the low response rate
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license. www.medicaljournals.se/acta
Journal Compilation © 2018 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.
doi: 10.2340/00015555-2809
Acta Derm Venereol 2018; 98: 167–168