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Eczema among adolescents in Kuwait: prevalence, severity, sleep disturbance, antihistamine use, and risk factors

Eczema among adolescents in Kuwait: prevalence, severity, sleep disturbance, antihistamine use, and risk factors
Eczema among adolescents in Kuwait: prevalence, severity, sleep disturbance, antihistamine use, and risk factors

Background: Eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a common inflammatory skin disease that is more prevalent in children and adolescents than adults. In Kuwait, there is a lack of empirical knowledge on eczema epidemiology among adolescents. Therefore, this study aimed to estimate the prevalence of eczema symptoms and severity, assess the frequency of eczema-related nocturnal sleep disturbance and its relation to antihistamine use, and determine factors that are associated with eczema prevalence and eczema-related nocturnal sleep disturbance. Methods: A school-based cross-sectional study enrolled adolescents (n = 3864) aged 11–14 years across Kuwait. Information on eczema symptoms and clinical history, use of antihistamines, parental history of eczema, mode of delivery, and childhood life-style factors and exposures were reported by parents. Current eczema was defined as chronic or chronically relapsing itchy dermatitis with characteristic morphology and distribution in the past 12 months. Among subjects reporting current itchy rash, frequency of nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash in the past 12 months was reported as: never, <1 night per week, and ≥1 nights per week. Associations were assessed by applying a modified Poisson regression to estimate adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: The prevalence estimate of current (past 12 months) itchy rash was 20.5% (735/3593) and current eczema was 10.2% (388/3791), with 19.5% (736/3775) reporting history of ever doctor-diagnosed eczema. Among subjects with current itchy rash, nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash affected 21.7% (157/724) of participants for <1 night per week and affected 12.7% (92/724) of participants for ≥1 nights per week. Antihistamine use at least once per month increased as the frequency of nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash increased (P trend <0.001). Factors that demonstrated association with current eczema prevalence included underweight body mass index (aPR = 1.71, 95% CI: 1.16–2.53), Cesarean section delivery (1.29, 1.01–1.65), and maternal (1.72, 1.35–2.19) and paternal (1.83, 1.44–2.32) history of eczema. Frequent (≥1 nights per week) nocturnal sleep disturbance was associated with Cesarean section delivery (1.98, 1.37–2.85), exposure to household tobacco smoke (1.70, 1.18–2.47), and dog-keeping (1.93, 1.06–3.52). Conclusions: Eczema symptoms are common among adolescents in Kuwait, with similar epidemiological patterns as those observed in western countries. A large proportion of affected adolescents reported nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash. Modifiable risk factors were associated increased prevalence of eczema and night awakenings.

Antihistamines, Atopic dermatitis, Eczema, Risk factors, Sleep
1939-4551
100731
Ziyab, Ali H.
12905e44-3fd1-47c2-98e5-35320e89815b
Holloway, John
4bbd77e6-c095-445d-a36b-a50a72f6fe1a
Yaser, Ali
fc3abfc6-03dd-4bdc-891a-d7bc0bc4df69
Zhang, Hongmei
9f774048-54d6-4321-a252-3887b2c76db0
Karmaus, Wilfried
281d0e53-6b5d-4d38-9732-3981b07cd853
Ziyab, Ali H.
12905e44-3fd1-47c2-98e5-35320e89815b
Holloway, John
4bbd77e6-c095-445d-a36b-a50a72f6fe1a
Yaser, Ali
fc3abfc6-03dd-4bdc-891a-d7bc0bc4df69
Zhang, Hongmei
9f774048-54d6-4321-a252-3887b2c76db0
Karmaus, Wilfried
281d0e53-6b5d-4d38-9732-3981b07cd853

Ziyab, Ali H., Holloway, John, Yaser, Ali, Zhang, Hongmei and Karmaus, Wilfried (2023) Eczema among adolescents in Kuwait: prevalence, severity, sleep disturbance, antihistamine use, and risk factors. World Allergy Organization Journal, 16 (1), 100731, [100731]. (doi:10.1016/j.waojou.2022.100731).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a common inflammatory skin disease that is more prevalent in children and adolescents than adults. In Kuwait, there is a lack of empirical knowledge on eczema epidemiology among adolescents. Therefore, this study aimed to estimate the prevalence of eczema symptoms and severity, assess the frequency of eczema-related nocturnal sleep disturbance and its relation to antihistamine use, and determine factors that are associated with eczema prevalence and eczema-related nocturnal sleep disturbance. Methods: A school-based cross-sectional study enrolled adolescents (n = 3864) aged 11–14 years across Kuwait. Information on eczema symptoms and clinical history, use of antihistamines, parental history of eczema, mode of delivery, and childhood life-style factors and exposures were reported by parents. Current eczema was defined as chronic or chronically relapsing itchy dermatitis with characteristic morphology and distribution in the past 12 months. Among subjects reporting current itchy rash, frequency of nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash in the past 12 months was reported as: never, <1 night per week, and ≥1 nights per week. Associations were assessed by applying a modified Poisson regression to estimate adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: The prevalence estimate of current (past 12 months) itchy rash was 20.5% (735/3593) and current eczema was 10.2% (388/3791), with 19.5% (736/3775) reporting history of ever doctor-diagnosed eczema. Among subjects with current itchy rash, nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash affected 21.7% (157/724) of participants for <1 night per week and affected 12.7% (92/724) of participants for ≥1 nights per week. Antihistamine use at least once per month increased as the frequency of nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash increased (P trend <0.001). Factors that demonstrated association with current eczema prevalence included underweight body mass index (aPR = 1.71, 95% CI: 1.16–2.53), Cesarean section delivery (1.29, 1.01–1.65), and maternal (1.72, 1.35–2.19) and paternal (1.83, 1.44–2.32) history of eczema. Frequent (≥1 nights per week) nocturnal sleep disturbance was associated with Cesarean section delivery (1.98, 1.37–2.85), exposure to household tobacco smoke (1.70, 1.18–2.47), and dog-keeping (1.93, 1.06–3.52). Conclusions: Eczema symptoms are common among adolescents in Kuwait, with similar epidemiological patterns as those observed in western countries. A large proportion of affected adolescents reported nocturnal sleep disturbance due to itchy rash. Modifiable risk factors were associated increased prevalence of eczema and night awakenings.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 November 2022
Published date: January 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This project was funded partially by Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences under project code: P115-13 MC-05. Additionally, this work was supported and funded by Kuwait University , Research Project No. MC01/16. The funders had no role in study design, data collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s)
Keywords: Antihistamines, Atopic dermatitis, Eczema, Risk factors, Sleep

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 473184
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473184
ISSN: 1939-4551
PURE UUID: fe3b51b5-5a00-4281-9087-473bd7d4adf1
ORCID for John Holloway: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9998-0464

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Date deposited: 11 Jan 2023 17:57
Last modified: 10 Aug 2024 01:35

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Contributors

Author: Ali H. Ziyab
Author: John Holloway ORCID iD
Author: Ali Yaser
Author: Hongmei Zhang
Author: Wilfried Karmaus

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