Celiac.com 03/30/2023 - A study recently published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology shows that people with psoriasis have twice the odds of having celiac disease compared to those without psoriasis.
The study is the work of a research team that included Marina Z. Joel, BS; Ryan Fan, BA; and Jeffrey M. Cohen, MD. They are variously affiliated with the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; the Yale School of Medicine, and the Department of Dermatology at Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
The Psoriasis & Celiac Disease Study
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For their study, the Ms. Joel and her colleagues examined the association between psoriasis and celiac disease. They used data from 316,166 adults, and found that of the 6,476 patients with psoriasis, 1.65% had celiac disease compared to nearly 0.5% of 309,690 patients without psoriasis.
The study controlled for various factors such as age, sex, race and ethnicity, smoking status, autoimmune diseases linked to psoriasis and celiac disease, and body mass index (BMI), and found that psoriasis remained significantly associated with celiac disease.
Study Findings
The authors note that while the exact mechanism behind this association is unclear, genome-wide association studies have found that many susceptibility loci for psoriasis overlap with those for celiac disease:
- “While the pathophysiologic mechanism behind the association between psoriasis and celiac disease is unclear, several explanations have been proposed. Genome-wide association studies have found that many susceptibility loci for psoriasis overlap with those for celiac disease," they write.
They add that "both psoriasis and celiac disease are T-cell driven disorders, there could be shared immunogenic mechanisms between the two conditions." Although more research is needed to fully understand the link between psoriasis and celiac disease, studies that help to document connections between celiac disease and other disorders are very helpful in clarifying the overall celiac disease puzzle.
Read more in Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
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