Quantification of Demodex folliculorum by PCR in rosacea and its relationship to skin innate immune activation.
Casas. Christiane C; Paul. Carle C; Lahfa. Morad M; Livideanu. Bulai B; Lejeune. Ophélie O; Alvarez-Georges. Sandrine S; Saint-Martory. Christine C; Degouy. Arnaud A; Mengeaud. Valérie V; Ginisty. Hervé H; Durbise. Elizabeth E; Schmitt. Anne M AM; Redoulès. Daniel D
Key Findings
- Demodex folliculorum detected in 96% of rosacea patients vs 74% of controls
- Mite density ~5.7‑fold higher in rosacea skin
- Rosacea skin shows higher expression of IL‑8, IL‑1β, TNF‑α, NALP‑3, CASP‑1, LL‑37, VEGF, CD45RO, MPO, and CD163
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that reducing Demodex mite load or dampening skin inflammation might help rosacea symptoms, but the paper doesn’t provide a specific peptide‑based protocol. Monitoring or targeting LL‑37 isn’t suggested as a treatment here.
Summary
The study found that people with rosacea have a lot more of the skin mite Demodex folliculorum than healthy folks, and their skin shows higher levels of inflammation and the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37. The mite load was especially high in the papulopustular type of rosacea. While the research shows a link between the mites, inflammation, and LL‑37, it doesn’t give any new treatment tips or dosage advice for using LL‑37 or other peptides.
Abstract
The aim of this study is to quantify D. folliculorum colonisation in rosacea subtypes and age-matched controls and to determine the relationship between D. folliculorum load, rosacea subtype and skin innate immune system activation markers. We set up a multicentre, cross-sectional, prospective study in which 98 adults were included: 50 with facial rosacea, including 18 with erythematotelangiectatic rosacea (ETR), and 32 with papulopustular rosacea (PPR) and 48 age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers. Non-invasive facial samples were taken to quantify D. folliculorum infestation by quantitative PCR and evaluate inflammatory and immune markers. Analysis of the skin samples show that D. folliculorum was detected more frequently in rosacea patients than age-matched controls (96% vs 74%, P < 0.01). D. folliculorum density was 5.7 times higher in rosacea patients than in healthy volunteers. Skin sample analysis showed a higher expression of genes encoding pro-inflammatory cytokines (Il-8, Il-1b, TNF-a) and inflammasome-related genes (NALP-3 and CASP-1) in rosacea, especially PPR. Overexpression of LL-37 and VEGF, as well as CD45RO, MPO and CD163, was observed, indicating broad immune system activation in patients with rosacea. In conclusion, D. folliculorum density is highly increased in patients with rosacea, irrespective of rosacea subtype. There appears to be an inverse relationship between D. folliculorum density and inflammation markers in the skin of rosacea patients, with clear differences between rosacea subtypes.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/exd.12030
226
18