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Advances in Dermatology and Allergology/Postępy Dermatologii i Alergologii
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vol. 35
 
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Original paper

The prevalence and etiological factors of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients

Alicja Romaszkiewicz
,
Barbara Bykowska
,
Monika Zabłotna
,
Michał Sobjanek
,
Martyna Sławińska
,
Roman J. Nowicki

Adv Dermatol Allergol 2018; XXXV (3): 309–313
Online publish date: 2018/06/18
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- The prevalence.pdf  [0.13 MB]
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Introduction

Onychomycosis is the most common pathology affecting the nail apparatus. Data on its prevalence differ between European countries and range from 2.7% to 8.4% [1–4]. In the Achilles study conducted in 16 European countries (n = 9600), the presence of toenail onychomycosis was assessed to be as high as 29.6% [5].
The role of a number of inherited, acquired and environmental factors has been identified to increase the risk of onychomycosis. Some author claim that psoriasis in an important risk factor.
Psoriasis is a chronic dermatological disease that affects 2–3% of the general population and the lifetime nail involvement is estimated to be up to 80% [6–8]. Morphological abnormalities in psoriatic nails may facilitate the fungal invasion. On the other hand, faster turnover of the nail plate should be a protective factor.
Epidemiological studies conducted so far provide ambiguous results. Some authors indicate that onychomycosis may affect up to 79% of psoriatic patients, the others show a low incidence of onychomycosis (15%) in this group.
From the clinical point of view, the potential relationship between these pathologies is very important as it influences the patient management. The presence of undetected and untreated fungi in the nail plate may increase the severity of nail psoriasis (Köbner phenomenon) and be the cause of the treatment failure.
Another questionable issue is the spectrum of causative fungi responsible for onychomycosis in psoriatics. There are some data suggesting that onychomycosis in psoriatic patients is more commonly caused by yeasts than in non-psoriatics [9–12], although significant differences have been noted depending on the population studied.
In the light of inconsistent findings, conducting future studies concerning this relevant issue is mandatory. We decided to assess the prevalence and etiological factors for onychomycosis in psoriatic patients from the Northern Polish population.

Aim

The aim of the study was: (1) to evaluate the prevalence of nail onychomycosis in psoriatic patients; (2) to define the causative agents identified in microscopic examination and culture; (3) to investigate the relationship between the severity of nail psoriasis and onychomycosis; (4) to assess the relationship between currently administered psoriasis treatment and the prevalence of onychomycosis.

Material and methods

The studied group (n = 2427) included 2325 patients with nail abnormalities raising a clinical suspicion of nail onychomycosis (with no history of psoriasis) referred to mycological laboratory and 102 psoriatic inpatients hospitalized in the Department of Dermatology between 2014 and 2016.
Nail abnormalities in non-psoriatic group included onycholysis, pachyonychia, subungual hyperkeratosis, onychorrhexis, chromonychia and onychodystrophy.
In the psoriatic group we observed nail alterations connected with matrix as well as with the nail bed involvement. The former included pitting, leukonychia, onychorrhexis and dystrophy. The latter included onycholysis, subungual hyperkeratosis and “oil drop” sign. The control group included 100 patients with no chronic dermatological disorders in whom we randomly detected some nail changes (onycholysis, chromonychia, nail fragility) during routine nevi assessment (n = 20).The assessment of psoriasis severity using (Nail Psoriasis Severity Index (NAPSI) and Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) was performed in all psoriatic patients.
The presence of fungi was confirmed in direct microscopic examination (with dimethyl sulfoxide) and mycological culture. Each sample obtained with the sterile lancet was cultured on Sabouraud dextrose agar with chloramphenicol and gentamicin with and without cycloheximide at room temperature for 4 weeks. Dermatophytes and molds were identified based on macroscopic and microscopic colony evaluation. Yeasts were identified using biochemical methods. A result was considered positive only when both direct microscopic examination and mycological culture were positive.

Statistical analysis

The 2 analysis was employed to test the significance of the differences between groups. Analyses were performed using the Statistica 12.0 software package (StatSoft, Inc., 2015). P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

The prevalence of onychomycosis in the studied groups is presented in Table 1. Statistical analysis revealed a significantly higher prevalence of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients and in non-psoriatic patients with structural nail alterations referred to mycological laboratory compared to controls (23.53% vs. 5%; p = 0.0004 and 22.37% vs. 5%; p < 0.0001, respectively).
The prevalence of onychomycosis did not differ significantly between psoriatic patients and non-psoriatic patients with nail alterations (p = 0.88).
The characteristics of the isolated fungi is presented in Table 2. Molds were significantly more prevalent factors of onychomycosis in psoriatic than in non-psoriatic patients (p = 0.003). Detailed descriptions of identified pathogens are presented in Table 3.
The frequency of onychomycosis was higher in psoriatic patients with NAPSI  40 (66.67% vs. 33.33%; p = 0.02). On the other hand, there was no correlation between PASI score and the prevalence of onychomycosis (Table 4).
Nail fungal infections were more common in psoriatic patients receiving systemic treatment compared to these treated exclusively with topical agents (75% vs. 25% respectively; p = 0.005) (Table 3).

Discussion

The presented study showed a relatively high prevalence (23.53%) of onychomycosis in patients with psoriasis. Nonetheless, the literature data on this issue are contradictory. A higher incidence of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients was observed by Leibovici et al. (47.6%) [13], Sánchez-Regana et al. (30%) [14] and Larsen et al. (27.8%) [10]. A lower incidence was described by Salomon et al. (18%) [15], Kaçar et al. (13.1%) [16] and Staberg et al. (13%) [17]. These data confirm the accuracy of performing screening mycological examination in patients with psoriasis.
The increased prevalence of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients in the studied group supports the hypothesis that the psoriasis is a risk factor for onychomycosis. On the other hand, the 5% prevalence of onychomycosis in the controls requires a critical approach to this conclusion.
Despite similar prevalence results obtained in Great Britain, Spain and Finland (2.7%, 2.6% and 8.4%, respectively) it seems to be low compared to Achilles study (29.6%) [2–5].
The pathogenesis of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients is not completely understood. Some authors claim that primary nail alterations which occur in the course of psoriasis may facilitate fungal infection [18]. On the other hand, increased release of human anti-microbial peptides, such as human cathelicidin LL-37, as well as faster nail growth observed in psoriatics, act as protective factors [19–21]. Another factor affecting the prevalence of onychomycosis in these patients is recommended systemic treatment. The potential risk of fungal infection is probably the combination of the above factors.
The characteristics of isolated fungi differed in psoriatic and non-psoriatic group (Table 2).
In psoriatics the most common etiological factors were yeasts, followed by dermatophytes and molds. A similar profile of isolated fungi in psoriatics was previously described by Larsen et al. [10] and Ständer et al. [22].
Molds were identified significantly more often in the psoriatic group compared to non-psoriatics, which is consistent with the previous study conducted by Leibovici et al. [13].
Yeasts were identified more often in the psoriatic group compared to non-psoriatics (although with no statistical significance). The higher prevalence of yeast in psoriatics was previously shown by Ständer et al. [22], Larsen et al. [10] and Staberg et al. [17].
Our study showed a positive correlation between the severity of nail alterations (NAPSI) and the prevalence of dermatophyte nail infections, which is in line with the study conducted by Kaçar et al. [16]. Some authors claim that onychomycosis may worsen nail psoriasis by inducing Köbner phenomenon. On the other hand, assessing the NAPSI score in psoriatic patients affected by onychomycosis may not be reliable as clinical symptoms of these two conditions may overlap [16, 23].
To the best of our knowledge, this is the second study which assessed the risk of onychomycosis with respect to PASI. Our results show no relationship between these two variables.
Other factors influencing the frequency of onychomycosis in the studied group were administered treatment modalities. In the present study, patients receiving systemic treatment were statistically more often affected by onychomycosis. Nevertheless, the specificity of the studied group (mostly patients with moderate to severe psoriasis hospitalized and receiving systemic treatment, including TNF- inhibitors) could affect the results.
Previous studies indicated an increased prevalence of onychomycosis in patients after kidney transplantation receiving cyclosporine compared to healthy controls [8, 24]. Additionally, the results of a randomized prospective study conducted by Al-Mutairi et al. [25] showed a higher prevalence of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients treated with etanercept, infliximab and adalimumab (20.3%) compared to individuals treated with different modalities (13.89%). The highest prevalence of fungal nail infections was associated with infliximab treatment.

Conclusions

The present study showed a similar prevalence of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients and non-psoriatic patients with nail alterations referred to mycological laboratory. The characteristics of isolated fungi differed significantly between psoriatic and non-psoriatic patients. NAPSI  40 and receiving systemic treatment increased the risk of onychomycosis in psoriatic patients. These results are consistent with some previous reports, however this study does not solve all problems and further studies are needed. To the best of our knowledge, this is the second study which assessed the risk of onychomycosis with respect to PASI. Additionally, it provided new epidemiological data on the Northern Polish population.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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