Abstract

A total of 10 455 new dermatology patients were seen in the dermatology clinics of King Fahad Hospital of the University (KFHU), Al-Khobar, Saudi Arabia, between January 1990 and December 1995. We identified 71 patients with a histopathologically confirmed diagnosis of specific forms of primary hereditary ichthyoses (PHI). We have reviewed the epidemiological and clinical features of these patients. To document the epidemiological and clinical features of patients with PHI in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. We used the dermatology out-patient department (OPD) logbooks to identify cases of PHI from new patients presenting with different dermatological problems over a 6-year period. We used specifically designed protocol forms to extract epidemiological and clinical data from the study patients' medical records. These were entered into a computer database and analyzed using standard statistical software. A total of 71 patients, 44 males and 27 females (male : female sex ratio of 1.63 : 1), were identified from a total of 10 455 new patients seen in our dermatology clinics between January 1990 and December 1995. The occurrence rate of PHI, in our clinics, was 0.67% or 7 per 1000 new dermatology cases. The clinical pattern of PHI showed that Icthyosis Vulgaris was the most common form seen, followed by Nonbullous Ichthyosiform Erythroderma. Thirty-one patients (44.7%) with Ichthyosis Vulgaris (IV) were seen: 12 patients (16.9%) with X-linked Recessive Ichthyosis (XLRI), four patients (5.6%) with Lamellar Ichthyosis (LI), three patients (4.2%) with Bullous Ichthyosiform Erythroderma (BIE) and 21 patients (29.6%) with Nonbullous Ichthyosiform Erythroderma (NBIE). There was a significantly high consanguinity rate in our patients (85%), and the family history was positive in 53 cases out of the 71 (75%). This preliminary study is the first report of its kind from Saudi Arabia and documents the clinico-epidemiological features of PHI patients in the Eastern Province. The high rate of parental consanguinity among our Saudi patients may account for the high proportion of patients with a positive family history. Consanguinity also probably explains why the most severe forms of PHI were seen in a significant number of new patients' siblings. These severe forms of PHI (Nonbullous Ichthyosiform Erythroderma, Bullous Ichthyosiform Erythroderma and Lamellar Ichthyosis) together constituted nearly 40% of all cases.

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