To the Editor: The dermatology community remains concerned about the risk of COVID-19 in individuals with atopic dermatitis (AD). Using Symphony Health-derived data from the COVID-19 Research Database,1 we aimed to assess the risk of contracting COVID-19 in adults with AD while controlling for demographic factors and comorbidities known or speculated to be COVID-19 risk factors and assess the risk of contracting COVID-19 in adults with AD treated with dupilumab.
Subjects aged ≥20 years were eligible for inclusion. All subjects with at least 2 diagnoses of AD prior to January 1, 2020, were included in the AD cohort. Subjects with no record of AD diagnosis prior to January 1, 2020, were randomly placed in the control group in a 10:1 size ratio compared with the AD group. Individuals without known ethnicity or race, type of payment, and/or sex were then excluded. Laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 between January 1, 2020, and April 17, 2021, were identified (Supplemental Fig I available via Mendeley at https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/j95wfcyy3j/1). A description of the methodology for this retrospective study is provided in Supplemental Methods (available via Mendeley at https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/t26gnt3pss/1), Supplemental Table I (available via Mendely at https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/ww6b5n327m/1), and Supplemental Table II (available via Mendeley at https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/tbh86d3z8r/1).
The AD and non-AD cohorts included 39,417 and 397,293 subjects, respectively (Table I ). Poisson regression revealed a crude COVID-19 incidence rate ratio (IRR) of 1.41 (95% CI 1.34-1.48) for adults with AD compared with adults without AD (Table II ). After adjusting for demographic factors and baseline comorbidities, the IRR remained statistically significant but was reduced to 1.18 (95% CI 1.12-1.24).
Table I.
Characteristics | Atopic Dermatitis (n = 39,417) | No Atopic Dermatitis (n = 397,293) | P Value |
---|---|---|---|
Age, mean (SD) | 54.9 (17.0) | 57.3 (16.0) | <.0001 |
Sex, n (%) | <.0001 | ||
Female | 23,555 (59.8) | 223,412 (56.2) | |
Male | 15,862 (40.2) | 173,881 (43.8) | |
Race/ethnicity, n (%) | |||
Caucasian | 25,187 (63.9) | 295,823 (74.5) | <.0001 |
Hispanic | 4468 (11.3) | 36,035 (9.1) | |
African American | 6969 (17.7) | 52,415 (13.2) | |
Asian | 1822 (4.6) | 6670 (1.7) | |
Other | 971 (2.5) | 6350 (1.6) | |
Payment type, n (%) | |||
Assistance program∗ | 24,065 (61.1) | 209,202 (52.7) | <.0001 |
Medicare, private, cash | 15,352 (39.0) | 188,091 (47.3) | |
Confirmed COVID-19, n (%) | 1807 (4.6) | 12,910 (3.3) | <.0001 |
Comorbidities, n (%) | |||
Asthma | 3428 (8.7) | 5024 (1.3) | <.0001 |
Rhinitis† | 5317 (13.5) | 3927 (1.0) | <.0001 |
COPD | 1519 (3.9) | 9667 (2.4) | <.0001 |
CHF | 896 (2.3) | 6598 (1.7) | <.0001 |
Chronic ischemic heart disease | 1464 (3.7) | 12,097 (3.0) | <.0001 |
DM2 | 4185 (10.6) | 29,258 (7.4) | <.0001 |
DM1 | 192 (0.5) | 1631 (0.4) | .025 |
Overweight or obese | 2580 (6.6) | 10,906 (2.8) | <.0001 |
CKD | 1442 (3.7) | 10,831 (2.7) | <.0001 |
Hypertension | 8880 (22.5) | 56,510 (14.2) | <.0001 |
HIV | 155 (0.4) | 623 (0.2) | <.0001 |
COPD, Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CHF, congestive heart failure; CKD, chronic kidney disease; DM2, type 2 diabetes mellitus; DM1, type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Includes Medicaid.
Allergic and/or vasomotor.
Table II.
Factor | Crude IRR (95% CI) | P Value | Adjusted IRR (95% CI)∗ | P Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
AD vs no AD—main analysis | 1.41 (1.34-1.48) | <.0001 | 1.18 (1.12-1.24) | <.0001 |
AD vs no AD—sensitivity analysis 1† | 1.51 (1.45-1.56) | <.0001 | 1.18 (1.12-1.24) | <.0001 |
AD vs no AD—sensitivity analysis 2‡ | 1.33 (1.14-1.56) | <.0001 | 1.31 (1.11-1.53)§ | .001 |
AD vs no AD—age subgroup analysis | ||||
Age 20-40 y | 1.32 (1.18-1.47) | <.0001 | 1.18 (1.05-1.33) | .007 |
Age ≥41 y | 1.44 (1.37-1.53) | <.0001 | 1.18 (1.12-1.25) | <.0001 |
AD vs no AD—sex subgroup analysis | ||||
Men | 1.36 (1.26-1.47) | <.0001 | 1.16 (1.07-1.25) | <.0001 |
Women | 1.45 (1.36-1.54) | <.0001 | 1.20 (1.12-1.28) | <.0001 |
Dupilumab vs no systemic medication | 0.62 (0.49-0.78) | <.0001 | 0.66 (0.52-0.83) | <.0001 |
Methotrexate vs no systemic medication | 0.80 (0.54-1.17) | .25 | 0.82 (0.56-1.21) | .32 |
Prednisone vs no systemic medication | 1.16 (1.04-1.30) | .007 | 1.13 (1.01-1.26) | .03 |
Cyclosporine vs no systemic medication | 1.37 (0.96-1.94) | .08 | 1.20 (0.84-1.71) | .32 |
Azathioprine vs no systemic medication | 1.68 (0.87-3.24) | .12 | 1.61 (0.83-3.10) | .16 |
Dupilumab vs methotrexate | 0.78 (0.50-1.21) | .26 | 0.80 (0.51-1.27) | .35 |
Dupilumab vs prednisone | 0.53 (0.42-0.68) | <.0001 | 0.58 (0.45-0.74) | <.0001 |
Dupilumab vs cyclosporine | 0.45 (0.30-0.68) | <.0001 | 0.57 (0.36-0.90) | .02 |
Dupilumab vs azathioprine | 0.37 (0.18-0.73) | .004 | 0.40 (0.20-0.82) | .01 |
AD, Atopic dermatitis; IRR, incidence rate ratio.
Adjusted for sex, age, race/ethnicity, payment type, and comorbidities (eg, asthma, rhinitis, overweight/obese, congestive heart failure, chronic ischemic heart disease, chronic kidney disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, essential hypertension, human immunodeficiency virus, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and type 1 diabetes mellitus).
Sensitivity analysis 1 includes subjects with missing race or ethnicity, type of payment, and/or sex.
Sensitivity analysis 2 includes subjects aged 20-59 years with zip code in California or New York and excludes subjects with a history of asthma, rhinitis, overweight or obese, congestive heart failure, chronic ischemic heart disease, chronic kidney disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, essential hypertension, human immunodeficiency virus, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and/or type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Adjusted for sex, age, race/ethnicity, payment type.
In a sensitivity analysis including subjects with missing race or ethnicity, sex, and/or type of payment (to account for selection bias), the risk of COVID-19 associated with AD remained unchanged (adjusted IRR 1.18). In another sensitivity analysis (to address potential type I error) including subjects aged 20-65 years with zip codes in California or New York and excluding subjects with comorbidities associated with COVID-19 (n = 32,857), the adjusted IRR point estimate was higher (1.31, 95% CI 1.11-1.53) than that in the main analysis.
Dupilumab was associated with lower risk of contracting COVID-19 (adjusted IRR 0.66, 95% CI 0.52-0.83) compared with no systemic medication. Additionally, AD subjects on dupilumab showed significantly lower associated risk of contracting COVID-19 infection compared with AD subjects exposed to prednisone, cyclosporine, and/or azathioprine (Table II).
The limitations include the inability to account for treatment duration and establish a strong causal relationship. Moreover, assessment of disease burden according to diagnostic codes might have missed individuals who never underwent COVID-19 laboratory testing. A prospective study with scheduled COVID-19 testing would address this limitation.
In this large population-based study, we found small increased risk of contracting COVID-19 to be associated with AD in adults. However, adult AD subjects had a higher prevalence of baseline comorbidities, previously identified as COVID-19 risk factors,2 , 3 compared with adults without AD. Our results were attenuated after adjusting for baseline comorbidities, suggesting that residual confounding may explain the remaining association. Studies are needed to identify which demographic characteristics or comorbidities are the strongest COVID-19 risk factors for adults with AD.
Dupilumab was associated with lower risk of contracting COVID-19 infection compared with other systemic medications. Interestingly, interleukin 4 activity (blocked by dupilumab)4 has been known to be associated with severe COVID-19 infections.5 Based on the current evidence, dupilumab does not appear to increase COVID-19 risk in patients with AD.
Conflicts of interest
Dr Wu is or has been an investigator, consultant, or speaker for AbbVie, Almirall, Amgen, Arcutis, Aristea Therapeutics, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol–Myers Squibb, Dermavant, Dr Reddy's Laboratories, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Mindera, Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi Genzyme, Solius, Sun Pharmaceutical, UCB, Valeant Pharmaceuticals North America LLC, and Zerigo Health. Dr Egeberg has received research funding from Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Bristol-Myers Squibb, AbbVie, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, the Danish National Psoriasis Foundation, the Simon Spies Foundation, and the Aage Bang's Foundation, and honoraria as consultant and/or speaker from AbbVie, Almirall, Leo Pharma, Galápagos NV, Sun Pharmaceuticals, Samsung Bioepis Co, Ltd, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Galderma, Dermavant, UCB, Mylan, Bristol–Myers Squibb, and Janssen Pharmaceuticals. Dr Thyssen has been an advisor, speaker, or investigator for AbbVie, LEO Pharma, Regeneron, Pfizer, Sanofi Genzyme, Almirall, and Eli Lilly. Dr Ge and Authors Martin, Liu, and Thatiparthi have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Acknowledgments
The data, technology, and services used in the generation of these research findings were generously supplied pro bono by the COVID-19 Research Database partners, who are acknowledged at https://covid19researchdatabase.org/.
Footnotes
Funding sources: None.
IRB approval status: Exempt - de-identified data.
References
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