Patient Characteristics, Diagnostic Testing Utilization, and Antifungal Prescribing Pattern for Onychomycosis in the USA: A Cohort Study Using DataDerm, 2016-2022.

IF 1.4 Q3 DERMATOLOGY
Skin Appendage Disorders Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-29 DOI:10.1159/000540704
Aditya K Gupta, Tong Wang, Anh N Tran
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Onychomycosis is a complex nail disease that is commonly seen in daily practice.

Methods: Electronic health records of clinically diagnosed onychomycosis patients were extracted using DataDerm - a dermatology data registry hosted by the American Academy of Dermatology - spanning from the year 2016 to 2022.

Results: Regardless of age, an increasing trend in patient volume was observed in the Southern US region, which accounted for 50.7-56.9% of onychomycosis patients in 2022. A coinfection of tinea pedis was present among 15.6-22.5% of patients. Diagnostic testing was infrequently utilized with less than one-quarter of patients having a histopathologic examination (12.7-21.9%) followed by fungal culture (5.5-8.2%) and direct microscopic examination (3.3-6.0%). Treatments were infrequently prescribed, accounting for less than one-quarter of patients (orals, terbinafine: 20.8-29.1%, fluconazole: 12.9-16.5%; topicals, efinaconazole: 3.2-13.8%); over 30% of treated patients received a combination regimen or experienced switching of treatments. Prescribing patterns did not significantly differ in vulnerable patient groups such as elderly patients and in patients with concomitant tinea pedis. Patients receiving a topical and/or oral antifungal prescription were frequently not tested to confirm the onychomycosis diagnosis (76.9%).

Conclusion: Our findings add to a growing body of literature calling for the improvement of onychomycosis management practices.

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CiteScore
2.00
自引率
10.00%
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69
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