Climate Conditions, Weather Changes, and Air Pollutants and Atopic Dermatitis

JAMA Dermatology

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

Systematic review and meta-analysis of 42 observational studies in adults (≥18 years) examining associations between ambient air pollution, weather, and climate and atopic dermatitis prevalence, severity, and clinic visits; databases were searched through June 28, 2024.

Key findings

Each 10-μg/m3 increase in PM10 (RR 1.008; 95% CI 1.003-1.012; high certainty), SO2 (RR 1.029; 95% CI 1.020-1.039; high certainty), PM2.5 (RR 1.013; 95% CI 0.999-1.027; moderate), and NO2 (RR 1.014; 95% CI 0.999-1.030; moderate) was associated with more atopic dermatitis outpatient visits. Extreme heat and cold increased AD-related visits (moderate to high certainty); higher humidity probably worsened severity (moderate certainty), higher precipitation may do so (low certainty), sunlight effects were very uncertain, and secondhand smoke plus traffic/industrial exposures probably increased AD prevalence (moderate certainty).

Study limitations

All included studies were observational, so results are associative and not causal. Findings apply only to adults (≥18 years), with no pediatric data. Several associations had moderate to very low certainty and confidence intervals that included 1.

Clinical implications

For adults with atopic dermatitis, anticipate higher visit burden during temperature extremes and when PM10 and SO2 are elevated; reducing exposure to pollutants and secondhand smoke is reasonable. Humidity likely worsens severity, precipitation may, and sunlight effects remain unclear.