Sex matters in CSU: Women face greater burden and poorer urticaria control, especially in midlife—CURE insights

  • Emek Kocatürk
  • , Pascale Salameh
  • , Riccardo Asero
  • , Mojca Bizjak
  • , Ana Gimenez-Arnau
  • , Clive Grattan
  • , David Pesqué
  • , Nidia Planella-Fontanillas
  • , Leonie Shirin Herzog
  • , Thomas Buttgereit
  • , Hanna Bonnekoh
  • , Daria Fomina
  • , Elena Kovalkova
  • , Marina Lebedkina
  • , Alicja Kasperska-Zajac
  • , Magdalena Zając
  • , Mateusz Zamłyński
  • , Kanokvalai Kulthanan
  • , Papapit Tuchinda
  • , Maryam Khoshkhui
  • Zohreh Hassanpour, Jonny Peter, Aurelie Du-Thanh, Raisa Meshkova, Mohamed Abuzakouk, Michael Makris, Laurence Bouillet, Alexis Bocquet, Stamatios Gregoriou, Simon Francis Thomsen, Joachim Dissemond, Petra Staubach, Andrea Bauer, Inna Danilycheva, Martijn van Doorn, Claudio Parisi, Martin Metz, Joachim W. Fluhr, Torsten Zuberbier, Karsten Weller, Pavel Kolkhir

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU), a disease predominantly affecting females, has limited information available on its differences between females and males of varying ages. Objectives: To investigate sex differences in age groups regarding disease activity, comorbidities, quality of life (QoL) and treatment patterns in CSU patients. Methods: We analysed Chronic Urticaria Registry (CURE) data, an international real-world registry for patients with chronic urticaria. Patients were recruited via an online platform using a standardized questionnaire. The data were analysed for demographics, age of onset, duration of urticaria, (Urticaria Activity Score [UAS], Urticaria Control Test [UCT], Chronic Urticaria Quality of Life Questionnaire [CU-Q2oL]), family history, systemic symptoms, aggravating factors, comorbidities, smoking and alcohol consumption, laboratory parameters, burden of disease, treatment distribution and response rates, compliance to treatment and adverse events. Comparisons were made among age groups <13, 13–17, 18–30, 31–50, 51–65 and >65 years. Results: Across 4136 CSU patients (from 58 sites across 29 countries), 2994 (72.4%) were female. Statistically significant female predominance started at age 31 (<0.001). Compared with males, females showed higher rates of angioedema (59.6 vs. 51.7%; p < 0.001), systemic symptoms (34.6 vs. 25.4%; p < 0.001), sleep disturbance (38.9 vs. 32.5%; p < 0.001), QoL impairment (CU-Q2oL score 32 vs. 27.7; p < 0.001) and lower rates of urticaria control than males in all medication categories (p < 0.05 for all). Females had more concomitant diseases, including asthma, thyroid disease, obesity, autoimmune disease, gastrointestinal disease and depression (p < 0.05 for all). The disease was especially more burdensome and refractory in females aged 51–65 years than males, evidenced by more angioedema and systemic symptoms, worse QoL, lower UCT scores and more emergency visits (p < 0.05 for all). However, these differences were not prominent in the elderly females (>65 years). Conclusions: Compared with males, female CSU patients experience more burdensome disease, which gets worse in midlife. Clinicaltrials.gov (or equivalent) listing (if applicable None).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)67-78
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology
Volume40
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • age
  • angioedema
  • autoimmune disease
  • chronic disease
  • chronic spontaneous urticaria
  • comorbidity
  • depression
  • female
  • health status disparities
  • hormones
  • male
  • menopause
  • microchimerism
  • quality of life
  • sex differences
  • treatment outcome
  • urticaria

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