Psychological morbidity in patients with pemphigus and its clinicodemographic risk factor: A comparative study

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Abstract

Due to the long disease duration, impact on appearance, social stigmatization, and numerous side effects of treatment, pemphigus, an autoimmune bullous disease, often has a significant psychological impact on patients. On the other hand, mood disorders may exacerbate the disease by affecting the patient's self-management, forming a vicious circle. To investigate anxiety and depressive disorders in patients with pemphigus, a total of 140 patients with pemphigus were recruited for this cross-sectional retrospective study between March 2020 and January 2022. A control group of 118 patients with psoriasis, a commonly known psychosomatic dermatosis, was established. Patients were evaluated at the visiting day with the Beck Anxiety Inventory and Beck Depression Inventory second edition for mood disorders, the Dermatology Life Quality Index and the EuroQol Five Dimensions Questionnaire for disease-related life quality, and the Visual Analogue Scale for pain and itching symptoms. In our cohort, 30.7% of patients with pemphigus suffered from either anxiety disorder (25%) or depressive disorders (14.3%). Propensity score matching was implemented to create a comparable cohort of pemphigus and psoriasis groups considering the baseline discrepancy. Thirty-four comparable pairs of pemphigus and psoriasis patients were extracted. The prevalence and severity of depressive disorder in pemphigus patients were significantly higher than in psoriasis patients, while anxiety disorder levels appeared to be similar in two groups. Multivariate logistic regression analysis further revealed that disease-related hospitalization history, active mucosal damage, and concomitant thyroid disease are independent risk factors for mood disorders in pemphigus patients. Our results showed that pemphigus patients had a high prevalence and severity of mood disorders. Relevant clinicodemographic indicators may be valuable for prediction and early identification of mood disorders in pemphigus. Better disease education from physicians may be important for these patients to achieve overall disease management.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Wang, J., Wu, H., Cong, W., Zhu, H., Zheng, J., Li, X., & Pan, M. (2023). Psychological morbidity in patients with pemphigus and its clinicodemographic risk factor: A comparative study. Journal of Dermatology, 50(10), 1237–1245. https://doi.org/10.1111/1346-8138.16875

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