Abstract

Chronic actinic dermatitis (CAD) is a recurrent photosensitive disease occurs predominantly in elderly men on sun-exposed areas, which seriously affect the patient's life quality. The etiology of CAD remains unknown. Sixty-six CAD patients, 66 atopic dermatitis (AD) patients, and 46 healthy people were enrolled into this study. Patient-level data were obtained from the electronic medical record and laboratory databases. We also obtained 29 tissue samples including 16 lichenoid lesions, 7 minimal erythematous dose (MED) analysis induced lesions, and 6 normal skin samples. Histopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis were performed. In the clinical characteristics, albumin was lower and uric acid was higher significantly in patients diagnosed as CAD. The infection rate of CAD patient after skin biopsy was considerably high (23.3%). The serum allergen test was prone to be negative in CAD patients. Lymphocytes were the dominate infiltrating cells in early and late CAD lesions, while more CD4+, CD8+, CD69+, and CD103+cells were found in the late lesions. There is no difference in CD4+/CD8+ratio and CD69+/CD103+ratio among groups. More mast cells were observed in the early-stage lesions, and more dendritic cell was observed in the late-stage lesions. CAD patients have certain oxidative stress and are prone to be infected after skin biopsy. Serum allergen detection is of little significance for CAD diagnosis. Mast cells may be involved in the early process of CAD, while dendritic cells and tissue-resident memory T cell (TRM) may be related to the chronic process of the disease.

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