Psychosocial burden and the impact of illness perceptions and stigma on quality of life, anxiety and depression in alopecia areata: results from the Alopecia + Me study

British Journal of Dermatology
Open Access

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

UK cross-sectional online study of 596 people with alopecia areata assessing how illness perceptions and stigma relate to quality of life, anxiety, and depression, compared with self-reported disease severity, using DLQI, EQ-5D-5L, HADS, SSCI-8, and BIPQ.

Key findings

Illness perceptions and stigma accounted for a larger share of variance in QoL, anxiety, and depression than disease severity in hierarchical regressions. Cluster analysis identified two patient groups based on illness perceptions with distinct levels of QoL impairment, anxiety, depression, and stigma.

Clinical implications

In AA visits, assess illness perceptions and stigma—not just visible severity—as these were more strongly linked to poorer QoL, anxiety, and depression, helping flag higher-risk patients for targeted support.