Nutritional Status in Pediatric Psoriasis: A Case-Control Study in a Tertiary Care Referral Centre

Children (Basel). 2024 Jul 22;11(7):885. doi: 10.3390/children11070885.

Abstract

Background: Psoriasis and obesity are chronic, inflammatory diseases, sharing certain pathophysiological factors. Psoriasis, increasingly viewed as a systemic inflammatory condition, may have various symptoms beyond the skin manifestations.

Methods: This research aimed to explore the connection between body mass index (BMI) and pediatric psoriasis, through a case-control study on 100 psoriasis cases and 100 controls who were matched in terms of age and sex. The percentiles of the BMI by age and sex determined the nutritional status of each patient and control. The severity of psoriasis was evaluated based on the psoriasis area and severity index (PASI), nail involvement based on the nail psoriasis severity index (NAPSI), and quality of life impairment with the dermatology life quality index (DLQI).

Results: While no statistically significant relationship was identified between increased BMI and PASI (p = 0.074), the risk of being overweight and obesity was significantly higher in the psoriasis group (OR 6.93, p = 0.003; OR 12.6, p < 0.001, respectively). The BMI increased with the PASI for psoriasis vulgaris but not for psoriasis inverse. No connections were found between disease duration and BMI (p = 0.56) or between BMI and PASI based on sex (p = 0.26). The NAPSI increased significantly with increased BMI (p = 0.000015).

Conclusions: This study highlights the association between elevated BMI, psoriasis diagnosis, and severity of psoriatic onychopathy in pediatric patients, advocating for further large-scale studies to confirm these explorations and increasing awareness for better screening and management of such cases for overweight/obese patients.

Keywords: BMI; NAPSI; obesity; overweight; pediatric PASI; psoriasis.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.