Publications

Publications, Books, Book Chapters and Reviews by Prof. Marcus Maurer, MD

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Autoimmune chronic spontaneous urticaria: what we know and what we don‘t know

Filename 121. Kolkhir et al., What we know.JACI 2017.pdf
Filesize 643.52 KB
Version r.121
Date added June 21, 2020
Downloaded 8 times
Category Reviews
Tags autoimmunity, causality, chronic spontaneous urticaria, Hill’s criteria of causality, IgE– anti-self, IgG–anti-FcεRI/IgE
Authors Kolkhir, P., Church, M. K., Weller, K., Metz, M., Schmetzer, O., and Maurer, M.
Citation Kolkhir, P., Church, M. K., Weller, K., Metz, M., Schmetzer, O., and Maurer, M.: Autoimmune chronic spontaneous urticaria: what we know and what we don‘t know. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 2017: 139; 1772-1781.
Corresponding authors Maurer, M.
DocNum r.121
DocType PDF
Edition; Page 139; 1772-1781
IF 13.26
Publisher J. Allergy Clin. Immunol.
ReleaseDate 2017

Chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) is a mast cell–driven skin disease characterized by the recurrence of transient wheals, angioedema, or both for more than 6 weeks. Autoimmunity is thought to be one of the most frequent causes of CSU. Type I and II autoimmunity (ie, IgE to autoallergens and IgG autoantibodies to IgE or its receptor, respectively) have been implicated in the etiology and pathogenesis of CSU. We analyzed the relevant literature and assessed the existing evidence in support of a role for type I and II autoimmunity in CSU with the help of Hill’s criteria of causality. For each of these criteria (ie, strength of association, consistency, specificity, temporality, biological gradient, plausibility, coherence, experiment, and analogy), we categorized the strength of evidence as ‘‘insufficient,’’ ‘‘low,’’ ‘‘moderate,’’ or ‘‘high’’ and then assigned levels of causality for type I and II autoimmunity in patients with CSU from level 1 (causal relationship) to level 5 (causality not likely). Based on the evidence in support of Hill’s criteria, type I autoimmunity in patients with CSU has level 3 causality (causal relationship suggested), and type II autoimmunity has level 2 causality (causal relationship likely). There are still many aspects of the pathologic mechanisms of CSU that need to be resolved, but it is becoming clear that there are at least 2 distinct pathways, type I and type II autoimmunity, that contribute to the pathogenesis of this complex disease. (J Allergy Clin Immunol 2017;139:1772-81.)

 

(Last update: 12.2023)

Number of original publications in peer-reviewed journals:580
Number of reviews in peer-reviewed journals:210
Number of publications (original work and reviews) in peer-reviewed journals:790
Cumulative IF for original publications in peer-reviewed journals:4196.39
Cumulative IF for reviews in peer-reviewed journals:1409.32
Cumulative IF of publications (original work & reviews) in peer-reviewed journals:5605.71
Total number of citations: 36,836, h-index: 99 (Web of Science December 2023)36836

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