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Eczema: Getting under the skin of a condition that makes young lives miserable The Children’s Medical & Research Foundation Our Lady’s Children’s Hospital, Crumlin & the National Children’s Research Centre Fast Facts > Why Eczema research matters Eczema is inflammation of the outer layer of the skin. It is primarily a disease of children, and it is on the increase in western society. It is believed 12-15% of all school-age children and 2-10% of adults also suffer the condition.It is very common in infancy – some 75 percent of all eczema sufferers will develop eczema between the ages of 3-12 months. Eczema is often painful and commonly features include dry, red, scaly skin which is intensely itchy. If children scratch, their skin can bleed with blister-like sores and scabs forming and infection a threat. Often they will suffer at school because their sleeping patterns are disrupted by this itchy and painful skin condition. Other children find themselves battling the considerable hurt that can result from stigmatisation due to visible skin problem setting them apart from their peers. Prof Alan Irvine & Prof Padraic Fallon Prof Alan Irvine, Professor of Pediatric Dermatology Key question in current research: How can we get to the bottom of inflammatory-based diseases, like eczema, so that we can help those whose lives are so profoundly affected by them? Ideal outcome from current research: We will have a much more detailed and sophisticated picture of what is going on at both a genetic and a cellular level when the body reacts so dramatically to its environment. Nature of research: Based on what is already the biggest DNA collection with detailed clinical information on children with eczema, the programme is now expanding into the UK, with funding from the Wellcome Trust – a clear indication of its huge scope for providing answers and therapies. It will continue to be managed from the NCRC. With your support: Consultant Dermatologist OLCHC, Associate Professor of Dermatology Trinity College Dublin, Alan has been involved in research since 1995 when he started his doctoral thesis in the genetics of skin disease; and he has been involved in many major breakthroughs in our understanding of skin diseases. His focus nowadays is on eczema, the commonest inflammatory disease in children, which is associated with food allergies and asthma as well as causing significant distress for patients in many other respects. A massive step in Alan’s research was the decision some years ago to begin developing a ‘case collection’ of detailed clinical information on Irish children with eczema, and it has since grown into the largest childhood collection of childhood atopic dermatitis (atopic dermatitis and eczema are interchangeable terms) in the world. Collaborating with other investigators using this case collection Alan has been involved with many of the major breakthroughs in our understanding of the genetics of eczema. For instance, in 2006 Alan and Irwin McLean, a long standing colleague and collaborator in the University of Dundee published their work identifying a major risk gene in eczema (filaggrin) and this became a huge news story in general media. Since then the collection has expanded and 13 papers have already been published relating to information derived from the data. There are now close to 1200 Irish patients tracked and as well as the original funding from the NCRC the study now also receives funding from the Wellcome Trust which means we will include UK patients. Our target is 4000 patients; we need these large numbers so that figuring out the genetics becomes easier. This expansion is project managed from the NCRC, the data management is based in the NCRC, and the DNA processing is in Dundee, so it’s a major international collaboration done to very high standard. This genetic work has put a new focus back on the skin barrier as a target for therapy. It has completely changed the way people see allergy; providing massive evidence that the skin is a primary source of allergic food reactions, and exposure through the skin is now considered a primary event in, for instance, peanut allergies. It has changed people’s concept of allergy from being primarily immunological (inside out) to also involving the skin’s ability to protect the body from allergens (outside in). With the rapidly improving infrastructure for clinical research in the country and more and more clinicians actively involved, we can expect Ireland to start to produce more quality research - making solid contributions internationally. But we need to avoid an overly reductionist and short-term view of what research can achieve. Previous governments’ focus was solely on the number of jobs that would be created immediately and while this is a valid question for government to ask, research doesn’t work in election cycles and requires a more sophisticated model of investment. Researchers based at the NCRC have also created a specialised atopic dermatitis website to support their work. This resource provides a wide range of general and study-specific information to clinical and nursing researchers, practitioners, patients and their parents. It can be accessed at ncrc-adc. nationalchildrensresearchcentre.org Prof Padraic Fallon, Director of the Paediatric Research in Translational Immunology. Key question in current research: Why do some children develop eczema while others don’t – even though they share a similar underlying genetic or physiological characteristic? Ideal outcome from current research: We can help answer very particular questions about what is triggering specific reactions in different patients, and meanwhile we are getting a more and more detailed understanding of how the reactions might be controlled. Nature of research: In a partnership with clinicians, Padraic’s laboratory teams use the latest equipment and models of the workings of the immune system to determine what is causing it to go wrong and to test possible treatments. With your support: Underlying many diseases of childhood (and adulthood), for example asthma, diabetes, or rheumatoid arthritis, is a breakdown in the immune system. That’s where Padraic Fallon, Science Foundation Ireland Stokes Professor in Translational Immunology in the School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin (TCD), comes in. He and his team operate behind-the-scenes providing clinicians with a cellular perspective on what the immune system is doing. “We know that some people are predisposed from birth to certain immunological reactions which are later triggered by environmental factors. Our work in conjunction with the clinicians looks for the triggers and ways of counteracting the response.” Their particular focus is on the allergic-like diseases including eczema and asthma, anaphylaxis and inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease etc.), as well as obesity and myocarditis. Using state-of-the-art equipment and mouse models Padraic’s team can look in great detail and from many different perspectives at the immune system’s reactions to see if there are hints as to where things are going wrong and might be put right. “We take the questions from the bedside back to bench, work on them in the laboratory, and bring the answers back to the bedside.” The Children’s Medical & Research Foundation Our Lady’s Children’s Hospital, Crumlin, 14 – 18 Drimnagh Road, Dublin 12 T: 01 709 1700 | F: 01 455 1045 E: [email protected] | www.cmrf.org Charity Number: CHY 4483A If you would like to learn more or support this programme please call our Director of Development, Edel O’Malley on + 353 1 7091700 or email [email protected]