Occurrence, Chronicity and Intensity of Itch in a Clinical Consecutive Sample of Patients with Skin Diseases: A Multi-centre Study in 13 European Countries

Authors

  • Christina Schut
  • Florence J. Dalgard
  • Jon Anders Halvorsen
  • Uwe Gieler
  • Lars Lien
  • Lucía Tomas Aragones
  • Françoise Poot
  • Gregor B. E. Jemec
  • Laurent Misery
  • Lajos Kemény
  • Francesca Sampogna
  • Henriët van Middendorp
  • Flora Balieva
  • Dennis Linder
  • Jacek C. Szepietowski
  • Andrey Lvov
  • Servando E. Marron
  • Ilknur K. Altunay
  • Andrew Y. Finlay
  • Sam Salek
  • Jörg Kupfer

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-3040

Abstract

Itch is an unpleasant symptom, affecting many dermatological patients. Studies investigating the occurrence and intensity of itch in dermatological patients often focus on a single skin disease and omit a control group with healthy skin. The aim of this multi-centre study was to assess the occurrence, chronicity and intensity (visual analogue scale 0?10) of itch in patients with different skin diseases and healthy-skin controls. Out of 3,530 dermatological patients, 54.3% reported itch (mean???standard deviation itch intensity 5.5???2.5), while out of 1,094 healthy-skin controls 8% had itch (3.6???2.3). Chronic itch was reported by 36.9% of the patients and 4.7% of the healthy-skin controls. Itch was most frequent (occurrence rates higher than 80%) in patients with unclassified pruritus, prurigo and related conditions, atopic dermatitis and hand eczema. However, many patients with psychodermatological conditions and naevi also reported itch (occurrence rates higher than 19%).

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Published

2018-10-18

How to Cite

Schut, C., Dalgard, F. J., Halvorsen, J. A., Gieler, U., Lien, L., Tomas Aragones, L., … Kupfer, J. (2018). Occurrence, Chronicity and Intensity of Itch in a Clinical Consecutive Sample of Patients with Skin Diseases: A Multi-centre Study in 13 European Countries. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 99(2), 146–151. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-3040

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Articles