1.Clinico-epidemiological profile, including body mass index of Malaysian children with psoriasis
Siew Eng Choon ; Chin Fang Ngim ; Premaa Supramaniam ; Kwee Eng Tey ; Nalini Nanu Madhavan
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2016;71(4):171-176
background: Limited information exists regarding paediatric
psoriasis and its association with body mass index (bMI) in
Asia.
Objectives: to determine the clinico-epidemiological profile
and to compare the bMI of children with and without
psoriasis.
Methods: A case-control study of 92 children with psoriasis
versus 59 with atopic eczema and 56 with non-inflammatory
skin conditions.
results: Psoriasis was more common in Malay and Indian
children when compared to Chinese with odds ratios (Or) of
4.30 (95% CI, 1.85-9.99) and 3.00 (95% CI, 1.02-8.81)
respectively. Prevalence of psoriasis was similar between
Malay and Indian children (Or 1.43, 95% CI, 0.63-3.25).
Male:female ratio was 1:1.09. the mean onset age of
psoriasis was 7.9 years. Median onset age was earlier in
males (6.5 years versus 9.0 years in females, p=0.05).
Plaque psoriasis was the most common phenotype (89.1%)
and 94.5% had scalp lesions. Arthritis was seen in 4.3%.
Odds of excess adiposity, defined as bMI ≥85th percentile,
was higher in children with psoriasis versus noninflammatory
controls (Or 2.35, 95% CI 0.99-5.56, p= 0.052).
No increased risk of adiposity was noted between children
with psoriasis and eczema (Or 1.14, 95% CI 0.5-2.62,
p=0.753). More children with psoriasis (17.4%) and eczema
(20.3%) were underweight (bMI <5th percentile) compared to
non-inflammatory controls (10.7%).
Conclusion: Malays and Indians are three to four times more
likely than Chinese to have psoriasis in multi-ethnic
Malaysia. Plaque psoriasis is the most common phenotype.
Odds of excess adiposity is about two times higher in
children with psoriasis compared to non-inflammatory
controls although this observation just missed conventional
statistical significance.
Psoriasis
2.Rockall risk score in predicting 30 days non-variceal upper gastrointestinal rebleeding in a Malaysian population
Henry Tan Chor Lip ; Heah Hsin Tak ; Tan Jih Huei ; Premaa Supramaniam ; Sarojah A/P Arulanantham
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2016;71(5):225-230
Objective: the aim of this study was to determine the
usefulness of Rockall score in predicting outcomes of 30
days rebleeding, mortality and need for surgical intervention
of bleeding gastric and duodenal ulcers.
Methods: this is a retrospective cohort study of all the
emergency endoscopies performed in Hospital sultan Ismail
from January 2009 to October 2014 for indications of upper
gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIb). Data was extracted from
hospital's electronic database and only non-variceal bleeds
were included. Rockall score was calculated and outcomes
of 30 days rebleeding, mortality and need for surgery was
recorded. For each outcome, calibration was done using the
Goodness-of-fit tests and discriminative ability was
reflected by area under the receiver operating characteristic
curve (AUROc).
Results: A total of 1323 patients were included with a male
preponderance of 64%. the overall rates of rebleeding were
11.2%, mortality rate of 8.7% and need for surgery was 2%.
Low AUROc values for rebleeding (0.63), mortality (0.58) and
surgery (0.67) showed poor discriminative ability of Rockall
score. the Goodness-of-fit test also revealed that the
scoring system was poorly calibrated in outcomes of
rebleeding (p <0.001), mortality (p = 0.001) and surgery (p =
0.038) with p-value <0.05. Patients with high risk (scores ≥8)
displayed highest rebleeding and mortality rates of 20%
respectively in comparison to the moderate (score 3-7) and
low (score ≤2) risk groups.
conclusion: Rockall score has a poor discriminative ability
and is poorly calibrated for rebleeding, mortality and need
for surgery in upper gastrointestinal bleeding. However, it is
the best tool we have now to stratify patients into risk
groups.
3.Validation of the Malay version of Autoimmune Bullous Disease Quality of Life (ABQOL) questionnaire
Evelyn Wen Yee Yap ; Kwee Eng Tey ; Premaa Supramaniam ; Dedee Murrell ; Siew Eng Choon
Malaysian Journal of Dermatology 2020;44(1):2-13
Autoimmune blistering diseases (AIBD) represent a group of rare and chronic disorders with significant
impact on quality of life (QoL). The aim of this study was to assess the validity and reliability of the
Malay translation of the autoimmune bullous disease quality of life (ABQOL) questionnaire.