Immune-Mediated and Psychiatric Comorbidities Among Patients Newly Diagnosed With Alopecia Areata

JAMA Dermatology
Open Access

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

A retrospective cohort of US claims (2007-2023) compared adolescents and adults (12-64 years) newly diagnosed with alopecia areata to controls without alopecia areata, assessing baseline prevalence and new-onset incidence of psychiatric and autoimmune comorbidities; some analyses used 1:4 matching by sex, age, and region (16,512 vs 66,048).

Key findings

At diagnosis, psychiatric comorbidity prevalence was 30.9% in alopecia areata vs 26.8% in controls (P<.001) and autoimmune comorbidity was 16.1% vs 8.9% (P<.0001). After diagnosis, risk of new-onset comorbidities was higher in alopecia areata: psychiatric AHR 1.3 (95% CI, 1.3-1.4) and autoimmune AHR 2.7 (95% CI, 2.5-2.8).

Clinical implications

Newly diagnosed alopecia areata is linked to higher baseline burden and increased subsequent risk of psychiatric and autoimmune comorbidities; counsel patients and monitor for these conditions after diagnosis.