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Epidermal Neurite Density in Skin Biopsies From Patients With Juvenile Fibromyalgia

Authors :
Shan Chen
Daniel B. Horton
Hang Lee
L. Nandini Moorthy
Ian Farquhar
Heather M. Downs
Alexis Boneparth
Anne Louise Oaklander
Source :
J Rheumatol
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
The Journal of Rheumatology, 2020.

Abstract

ObjectiveFibromyalgia (FM) is defined by idiopathic, chronic, widespread musculoskeletal pain. In adults with FM, a metaanalysis of lower-leg skin biopsy demonstrated 45% pooled prevalence of abnormally low epidermal neurite density (END). END < 5th centile of the normal distribution is the consensus diagnostic threshold for small-fiber neuropathy. However, the clinical significance of END findings in FM is unknown. Here, we examine the prevalence of small-fiber pathology in juvenile FM, which has not been studied previously.MethodsWe screened 21 patients aged 13–20 years with FM diagnosed by pediatric rheumatologists. Fifteen meeting the American College of Rheumatology criteria (modified for juvenile FM) underwent lower-leg measurements of END and completed validated questionnaires assessing pain, functional disability, and dysautonomia symptoms. The primary outcome was proportion of FM patients with END < 5th centile of age/sex/race-based laboratory norms. Cases were systematically matched by ethnicity, race, sex, and age to a group of previously biopsied healthy adolescents with selection blinded to biopsy results. All 23 controls matching demographic criteria were included.ResultsAmong biopsied juvenile FM patients, 53% (8/15) had END < 5th centile vs 4% (1/23) of healthy controls (P < 0.001). Mean patient END was 273/mm2 skin surface (95% CI 198–389) vs 413/mm2 (95% CI 359–467, P < 0.001). As expected, patients with FM reported more functional disability, dysautonomia, and pain than healthy controls.ConclusionAbnormal END reduction is common in adolescents with FM, with similar prevalence in adults with FM. More studies are needed to fully characterize the significance of low END in FM and to elucidate the clinical implications of these findings.

Details

ISSN :
14992752 and 0315162X
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d900f6e0cd74d7804c67320ca4a3dc0f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3899/jrheum.200378