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Eczema News – ‘Lipid fingerprint’ Treatment Approach

At end September 2015, it was announced on various medical new sites that Oregon State University’s researchers have developed a new approach to treat eczema that is

  • Personalized; and based on
  • Individual lipid deficiencies (akin to lipid fingerprint)

The new system patented (yet to be developed) requires testing of skin and lipid samples (from sticking and pulling off a piece of tape on/from the skin), using a mass spectrometry. The testing is non-invasive and suitable for infants and elderly as well.

Target Lipid Deficiency for Eczema Treatment
Target Lipid Deficiency for Eczema Treatment

It is established that eczema skin is often lacking in lipids, the reason why many moisturizers have active ingredients to restore the skin lipid levels such as ceramides, cholesterol and free fatty acids. However, there are many types of skin lipids and researchers at OSU believe that choosing the skincare and therapeutic product that specifically target one’s deficient lipids will help eczema sufferers.

Hopefully when developed, the ‘lipid fingerprint’ system will address:

  • Steroid usage which has side effects with long-term use
  • ‘One size fits all’ method of moisturizer selection
  • Reduce costs associated with doctor consultation and that of using the ‘wrong’ products – when the deficient lipids can be identified, it can then be known which lipid composition is missing, i.e. those that serve protective or barrier or antimicrobial function.

Associate Professor Arup Indra explained in an interview that “Lipids in our skin help retain moisture, they act like a blanket that protects against irritation and infection, You could think of skin cells as the bricks of a wall, but lipids are the mortar that prevent things from getting through the cracks. When they are deficient, problems can develop.”

Previous research by A/P Indra and other researchers has identified a protein (Ctip2) that is critical for forming and maintaining the skin barrier in mice, and for skin lipid metabolism. Mice that had Ctip2 removed had dry and scaly skin, and developed skin lesions. The removal of Ctip2 also led to increased inflammation, with presence of high levels of inflammatory proteins, enlarged lymph nodes and spleen in the mice. Without Ctip2, TSLP (another protein that has been known to activate other cells to be pro-inflammatory, linked to eczema and asthma) also became 1000-fold higher in the mice.

It is interesting research by the College of Pharmacy at OSU and my personal thought is that even if targeting deficient lipids alone may not ‘cure’ eczema for everyone, it will definitely help to reduce the cost of buying moisturizers that are not the ‘right lipid fit’. Keeping fingers crossed that R&D in atopic dermatitis will have breakthrough in the next few years to provide relief for all eczema sufferers.

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