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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2021 pubmed 71 citations

Eczema herpeticum in atopic dermatitis.

Traidl. Stephan S; Roesner. Lennart L; Zeitvogel. Jana J; Werfel. Thomas T

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 and other antimicrobial peptides are reduced in eczema herpeticum patients
  • Immune shifts (more IL‑4, IL‑25, TSLP, less interferon activity) and skin barrier gene changes increase infection risk
  • Dupilumab treatment appears to lower the chance of getting eczema herpeticum

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters, the main takeaway is that low LL‑37 may be a risk marker for severe eczema infections. Supporting skin barrier health, reducing Staph aureus colonization, and possibly using topical antimicrobial peptide formulations could be worth exploring, but there’s no proven protocol yet.

Summary

Eczema herpeticum is a dangerous skin infection that can happen in people with eczema. The review shows that patients with this infection have lower levels of the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, along with other immune and skin barrier problems. While this points to LL‑37 as a possible factor, the paper doesn’t give any direct ways to boost it or prove that doing so helps.

Abstract

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is one of the most common chronic inflammatory skin diseases leading to pruritic skin lesions. A subset of AD patients exhibits a disseminated severe HSV infection called eczema herpeticum (EH) that can cause life-threatening complications. This review gives an overview of the clinical picture, and characteristics of the patients as well as the diagnosis and therapy of EH. A special focus lies on the pathophysiological hallmarks identified so far that predispose for EH. This aspect covers genetic aberrations, immunological changes, and environmental influences displaying a complex multifactorial situation, which is not completely understood. Type 2 skewing of virus-specific T cells in ADEH<sup>+</sup> patients has been implicated in immune profile abnormalities, along with impaired functions of dendritic cells and natural killer cells. Furthermore, aberrations in interferon pathway-related genes such as IFNG and IFNGR1 have been identified to increase the risk of EH. IL-4, IL-25, and thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) are overexpressed in EH, whereas antimicrobial peptides like human &#x3b2;-defensins and LL-37 are reduced. Concerning the epidermal barrier, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in skin barrier proteins such as filaggrin were identified in ADEH<sup>+</sup> patients. A dysbalance of the skin microbiome also contributes to EH due to an increase of Staphylococcus aureus, which provides a supporting role to the viral infection via secreted toxins such as &#x3b1;-toxin. The risk of EH is reduced in AD patients treated with dupilumab. Further research is needed to identify and specifically target risk factors for EH in AD patients.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-05-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/all.14853

Citations

71

References

140