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Differences in Atopic Dermatitis Presentation Across Age Groups and Skin Types

Opinion
Video

Panelists discuss how atopic dermatitis (AD) affects approximately 7% of adults, has increased by 3% to 5% over the last 5 years, and impacts different body regions depending on age groups.

Video content above is prompted by the following:

Demographic Data on Atopic Dermatitis

  • Affects approximately 7% of adults, increasing 3% to 5% over last 5 years
  • Slightly more common in women and people of multiple races
  • Onset patterns: 58% of adults developed AD at age 18+, 25% at age 5 or younger, 24% at age 50+
  • Age-specific distribution: 18-39 years (flexural surfaces, neck, elbows); 40+ years (neck, hands, face)
  • Severity breakdown: 60% mild, 29% moderate, 11% severe

Distinguishing Features and Diagnosis

  • Distribution patterns vary by age:
    • Infants: cheeks, scalp, extensor surfaces
    • Children: antecubital fossa, popliteal fossa, neck, wrists
    • Adults: flexural surfaces, neck, hands, eyelids
  • Diagnostic aids: IgE blood work (elevated in 50%-60% of AD patients), elevated eosinophil count
  • Clinical importance of the “atopic march”: progression from eczema to asthma, allergic rhinitis, and allergic conjunctivitis
  • Early intervention may reduce development of atopic march by preventing skin barrier compromise

Clinical Presentation Variations

  • Skin type impacts presentation: darker skin may show papular/follicular presentation with less visible erythema
  • May appear violaceous rather than erythematous in darker skin types
  • Chronicity factors: long-standing untreated eczema may develop into:
    • Lichen simplex chronicus (thickened plaques from scratch-itch cycle)
    • Prurigo nodularis (“picker’s nodules”)
  • Common thread across variations: persistent, intense itching
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