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Every person having Verneuil's disease (skin) was vitamin D deficient – Dec 2014

Verneuil's disease, innate immunity and vitamin D: a pilot study

A. Guillet1, A. Brocard1, K. Bach Ngohou2, N. Graveline2, A.-G. Leloup2, D. Ali2, J.-M. Nguyen3, M.-J. Loirat4, C. Chevalier4, A. Khammari1 andB. Dreno1,*
Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology, DOI: 10.1111/jdv.12857, Early View

Vitamin D Life Summary

Verneuil's disease is a skin problem which about 1% of women have
100% had < 30 ng, 36% had < 10 ng
Verneuil's disease (Hidradenitis suppurativa) is typically undiagnosed.
Giving an unstated amount of vitamin D reduced the disease
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__See also Vitamin D Life


Note: Many skin problems are treated by vitamin D supplements, topical vitamin D, and UV light


Background
Verneuil's disease is a chronic inflammatory skin disease of the follicles in apocrine glands rich area of the skin (axillary, inguinal, anogenital) and is associated with a deficient skin innate immunity. It is characterized by the occurrence of nodules, abscesses, fistulas, scars. Recently, vitamin D has been shown to stimulate skin innate immunity.

Objective
The primary objective of the study was to assess whether Verneuil's disease was associated with vitamin D deficiency. The secondary objective was to determine whether vitamin D supplementation could improve inflammatory lesions.

Methods
First, 25(OH) vitamin D3 serum levels in patients with Verneuil's disease followed at Nantes University Hospital were compared to those of healthy donors from the French Blood Bank. Then, a pilot study was conducted in 14 patients supplemented with vitamin D according to their vitamin D level at baseline at months 3 and 6. The endpoints at 6 months were decreased by at least 20% in the number of nodules and in the frequency of flare-ups.

Results
Twenty-two patients (100%) had vitamin D deficiency (level <30 ng/mL) of whom 36% were severely deficient (level <10 ng/mL), having correlation with the disease severity (P = 0.03268) vs. 20 controls with vitamin D deficiency (91%) of whom 14% were severely deficient. In 14 patients, the supplementation significantly decreased the number of nodules at 6 months (P = 0.01133), and the endpoints were achieved in 79% of these patients. A correlation between the therapeutic success and the importance of the increase in vitamin D level after supplementation was observed (P = 0.01099).

Conclusion
Our study shows that Verneuil's disease is associated with a major vitamin D deficiency, correlated with the disease severity. It suggests that vitamin D could significantly improve the inflammatory nodules, probably by stimulating the skin innate immunity. A larger randomized study is needed to confirm these findings.


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Attached files

ID Name Comment Uploaded Size Downloads
4746 Ver3.jpg admin 17 Dec, 2014 13:37 19.03 Kb 32174
4745 Ver2.jpg admin 17 Dec, 2014 13:36 31.45 Kb 7273
4744 Ver1.jpg admin 17 Dec, 2014 13:36 7.92 Kb 5136
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