Topical Steroid Withdrawal in Atopic Dermatitis: Patient-reported Characterization from a Swedish Social Media Questionnaire

Acta Dermato-Venereologica
Open Access

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

An observational cross-sectional online questionnaire targeted adults (≥18 years) with both atopic dermatitis and self-reported topical steroid withdrawal via a Swedish Facebook group over 4 weeks in 2023; 98 accessed, 82 completed.

Key findings

Among 82 participants, 93% (76/82) believed topical glucocorticoids triggered their symptoms; 33% (27/82) also cited oral glucocorticoids, and 60% (49/82) reported ≥2 episodes (26% [21/82] ≥5), with 65% (53/82) reporting concurrent AD and TSW. Erythema was reported by 98%, pruritus/sleep disturbance/burning/stinging/pain each by >80%; 21% (17/82) were still using topical steroids; active TSW and AD were reported by 83% (68/82) and 74% (61/82), respectively.

Study limitations

Recruitment used social-media snowball sampling with an unknown denominator, high risk of selection bias, and unclear external validity. Diagnoses and outcomes were self-reported (84% self-diagnosed TSW) without clinical confirmation, and key confounders (e.g., specific contact allergen data, re-exposure to steroids, AD severity) were not characterized.

Clinical implications

Patients who self-identify TSW report substantial morbidity (itch, sleep loss, mood symptoms) and often believe steroids trigger it; clinicians should acknowledge concerns, screen for sleep/mental health, and evaluate alternative explanations (e.g., contact dermatitis) as TSW remains an exclusion diagnosis.