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All Things Urticaria – Learning about urticaria with Prof. Dr. Torsten Zuberbier

UCARE, the Global Allergy and Asthma Excellence Network for Urticaria
All Things Urticaria – Learning about urticaria with Prof. Dr. Torsten Zuberbier
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  • Living with SD: from Triggers to Future Therapies
    In this episode, Sophia Neisinger welcomes Dr. Melba Muñoz, head of the Chronic Inducible Urticaria Program in Berlin, to discuss symptomatic dermographism (SD), the most common form of inducible urticaria. They discuss: 🔹 What exactly is symptomatic dermographism, and why is it so burdensome for patients? 🔹 How common is SD, and what did the latest international prevalence study reveal? 🔹 How can tools like the FricTest help diagnose and assess SD? 🔹 Which treatments are available today—and which exciting therapies are on the horizon? Dr. Muñoz shares insights on the challenges SD patients face in daily life, the importance of proper diagnosis, and why new therapies in clinical trials may soon change the landscape of treatment. She also highlights the need for awareness among both physicians and patients to reduce diagnostic delays and improve care. Join us for this engaging conversation on how better diagnostics, treatment options, and awareness can transform the lives of SD patients. Key Learnings from the Episode Definition: Symptomatic dermographism is a form of inducible urticaria where scratching or stroking on the skin leads to wheals, redness, and itch. Prevalence: International data suggest approximately 4% of the population may be affected, making it surprisingly common. Impact: Even daily activities like wearing clothes or combing hair can trigger symptoms, causing significant quality-of-life impairment. Diagnosis: The FricTest is a standardized tool to diagnose and measure SD activity, more reliable than ad-hoc methods like using a pen. Overlap: Around 30–40% of SD patients also present with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU). Treatment today: Only antihistamines are licensed; omalizumab may be used off-label (or in-label if CSU is present). Future therapies: Anti-KIT antibodies (barzolvolimab, briquilumab), oral KIT inhibitors, and BTK inhibitors (remibrutinib) show great promise. Diagnostic delays: Many SD patients experience long delays, partly due to lack of awareness and the perception that symptoms are "normal." Patient-reported tools: The Urticaria Control Test (UCT) and the new SD-Qual scale are validated instruments for assessing disease control and quality of life. Awareness: Education for general practitioners and patients is key, as many still use antihistamines incorrectly (on demand instead of regularly). Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Symptomatic Demographism 02:53 Understanding Symptomatic Demographism 04:49 Prevalence and Diagnosis of SD 06:54 Diagnostic Tools for SD 09:16 Treatment Options for SD 13:52 Challenges in Diagnosis and Awareness 18:40 Patient-Reported Outcomes and Future Directions Do you have suggestions for future episodes? Please provide feedback and offer your suggestions for future topics and expert selection here.Feedback form:ATU: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://forms.office.com/e/m6a2uEdsUH
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  • Urticaria in Children: Diagnosis, Triggers & Treatment
    In this episode, Prof. Torsten Zuberbier welcomes Dr. Larissa Brandão, pediatric allergist from the Federal University of São Paulo, Brazil, to talk about chronic urticaria in children — a condition that is often misunderstood and underdiagnosed. They discuss: 🔹 When does chronic urticaria typically begin in kids? 🔹 What role do infections or allergens, play? 🔹 Which treatments are available in public healthcare? 🔹 How do cold urticaria and cholinergic urticaria show up in warm climates?Dr. Brandão shares her clinical experience from Brazil, where many children with chronic urticaria also suffer from comorbidities like asthma and allergic rhinitis. She explains how treatment responses differ from adults and discusses the impact of restricted access to second-generation antihistamines.Join us for a practical and global look at what it takes to recognize, treat, and support children with chronic urticaria — especially in resource-limited settings. Key Learnings from the Episode Chronic urticaria in children typically begins around age 7–8, with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) being the most common subtype. In Brazil is the most common chronic inducible form; cold urticaria and cholinergic urticaria are also present but less frequent. Cold triggers in Brazil include ice cream, cold drinks, pools, and beaches — not ambient winter weather. Pediatric CSU patients often have comorbid atopic conditions, especially asthma and allergic rhinitis. Children tend to respond better than adults to standard or up-dosed second-generation antihistamines, but fatigue can be a common side effect. Loratadine is the only antihistamine widely available through Brazil’s public health system; desloratadine, bilastine, or fexofenadine are often unaffordable. Liver function monitoring is used for kids on high-dose loratadine. Omalizumab is rarely needed, but effective in more severe pediatric cases — especially those with comorbid asthma. Dupilumab is now licensed in Brazil for CSU in children aged 12+, and early reports show benefits for patients with both asthma and urticaria. Pseudoallergen-triggered symptoms (e.g. from candy, dyes, preservatives) are observed, and short-term elimination diets are used diagnostically. Cold urticaria can cause anaphylaxis, especially in pools — and adrenaline auto-injectors are recommended for high-risk children. Counseling on safety, including family education about temperature triggers, is essential for cold urticaria management. Brazilian UCARE centers use social media and in-clinic education to raise awareness and prepare for Urticaria Day (October 1) each year. Chapters00:00 Introduction to Urticaria in Children01:46 Understanding Chronic Urticaria in Children03:33 Infections and Chronic Urticaria05:13 Allergic Comorbidities in Children06:27 Treatment Algorithms for Chronic Urticaria08:32 Dietary Influences on Urticaria12:09 Cold Urticaria and Safety Concerns15:13 Advancements in Urticaria Treatment17:30 Advocacy and Awareness for UrticariaDo you have suggestions for future episodes? Please provide feedback and offer your suggestions for future topics and expert selection here.Feedback form:ATU: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://forms.office.com/e/m6a2uEdsUH
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  • Itch & Urticaria: Mechanisms, Misconceptions & Hope
    In this episode, Prof. Torsten Zuberbier welcomes Prof. Gil Yosipovitch, world-renowned itch researcher and dermatologist at the University of Miami, for an in-depth discussion on the science of itch in urticaria, and why histamine isn’t the full story. They discuss: 🔹 Why do antihistamines fail in up to 40% of urticaria patients? 🔹 What is MRGPRX2, and why is it such a promising target for future treatments? 🔹 How do pain and itch differ neurologically — and why is itch harder to ignore? 🔹 What role do topical steroids, JAK inhibitors, and GABAergic drugs play? Prof. Yosipovitch shares clinical and research insights on chronic itch mechanisms, highlighting how mast cells, nerves, cytokines, and ion channels interact to drive symptoms. The episode also explores why scratching can feel pleasurable, what makes urticaria itch unique, and how new therapies could revolutionize care. Join us for a cutting-edge conversation on the future of urticaria treatment — and why individualized care is the most powerful approach of all.  Key Learnings from the Episode Chronic urticaria itch is not purely histaminergic — up to 40% of patients don’t respond to antihistamines, indicating other mechanisms. MRGPRX2 is a key non-histaminergic itch receptor found on mast cells and possibly nerve fibers — and is overexpressed in many itch disorders. Scratching itch activates pleasure centers in the brain, but urticaria patients scratch less deeply than those with atopic dermatitis. Cold and heat don’t always inhibit itch — responses vary across diseases and individuals, involving channels like TRPM8. Steroids and JAK inhibitors modulate both histaminergic and non-histaminergic itch pathways. Long-term steroid use is still widespread, especially in the US — but leads to serious comorbidities.Gabapentin and SNRIs like mirtazapine are valid add-on options in selected chronic itch patients. New biologics and mast cell-targeting drugs (like CKIT inhibitors) are on the horizon and may transform treatment. Each patient is unique — clinicians must move beyond dogma and adjust treatments to the individual, not just the guideline. Chapters00:00 Understanding Itch: The Science Behind Chronic Pruritus03:02 The Role of MRGPRX2 in Itch Mechanisms05:53 Pain vs. Itch: Exploring the Neural Pathways09:03 Individual Patient Experiences: The Complexity of Itch11:48 Treatment Approaches: Antihistamines and Beyond15:11 Emerging Therapies: The Future of Itch ManagementDo you have suggestions for future episodes? Please provide feedback and offer your suggestions for future topics and expert selection here.Feedback form:ATU: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://forms.office.com/e/m6a2uEdsUH
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  • Females, Pregnancy & Chronic Urticaria: What Doctors Should Know
    In this episode, Dr. Sophia Neisinger welcomes Prof. Emek Kocatürk, leading urticaria researcher and UCARE expert from Istanbul, to explore the gender-specific aspects of chronic urticaria, with a special focus on pregnancy. They discuss: 🔹 Why do more women than men suffer from chronic urticaria? 🔹 How does pregnancy affect urticaria symptoms and treatment response? 🔹 What medications are safe during pregnancy and breastfeeding? 🔹 How should physicians approach treatment decisions with female patients? Prof. Kocatürk shares key insights from the PREG-CU study, involving over 300 pregnant CSU patients, and explains why half of them improve during pregnancy. She outlines practical treatment guidelines for antihistamines and omalizumab use during pregnancy and breastfeeding, discusses estrogen’s inflammatory role, and gives tips for shared decision-making in clinical care. Join us for an important and empowering episode that sheds light on female-specific urticaria challenges and how to manage them with evidence-based confidence.Key Learnings from the Episode 70% of CSU patients are female, pointing to hormonal and autoimmune factors in disease susceptibility. Female CSU patients suffer more: more angioedema, systemic symptoms, worse disease control, and more comorbidities like asthma, thyroid disease, and depression. The PREG-CU study showed that 50% of CSU patients improve during pregnancy, offering hope to women planning to conceive. Exacerbations during pregnancy are common and linked to worse pregnancy outcomes if untreated. Antihistamines (especially cetirizine, loratadine) are safe in pregnancy; second-generation agents are preferred. Omalizumab is safe in pregnancy and lactation, particularly starting in the second trimester. Antihistamines can be safely continued and even up-dosed during breastfeeding. Keeping CSU under control during and after pregnancy is essential for maternal well-being and newborn bonding. Shared decision-making and good counseling reduce fear and improve patient experience. Digital tools, registries like CURE and CARE, and collaborative research are key to improving care for women with urticaria. Chapters 00:00 Understanding Chronic Urticaria: A Female Predominance 06:20 Pregnancy and Chronic Urticaria: What to Expect 11:36 Managing Urticaria During Pregnancy and Lactation 17:18 Fun Facts and Closing Thoughts Do you have suggestions for future episodes? Please provide feedback and offer your suggestions for future topics and expert selection here.Feedback form:ATU: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://forms.office.com/e/m6a2uEdsUH
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  • The spectrum of cold urticaria
    ⁠In this episode, Prof. Torsten Zuberbier calls up Dr. Hanna Bonnekoh, dermatologist and researcher at Charité Berlin, to dive into the complexities of cold-induced urticaria—particularly rare and familial forms that challenge current diagnostics and treatments. ⁠They discuss: 🔹 What makes wind-induced cold urticaria so difficult to diagnose? 🔹 How can physicians distinguish between histamine- and IL-1-mediated disease? 🔹 What role do biologics like omalizumab and dupilumab play in treatment? 🔹 Why are IL-1 blockers crucial in autoinflammatory syndromes like Muckle-Wells-syndrome? Dr. Bonnekoh shares her clinical perspective on diagnostic tools like the TempTest, the pathophysiology behind cold urticaria variants, and how novel therapies like anti-CKIT antibodies are shaping the future of care. She also emphasizes the importance of family history, wheal morphology, and systemic symptoms when evaluating patients with atypical urticaria. Join us for a deep dive into cold urticaria phenotypes, treatment strategies, and the call for more research and global registry data to support patients worldwide. Key Learnings from the Episode Cold urticaria includes rare phenotypes, such as wind-induced and familial forms, often undetectable by standard tests. The TempTest is useful for threshold diagnosis, but not all cold urticaria types respond. Histamine-mediated urticaria may respond to antihistamines or omalizumab, while IL-1-mediated types (e.g., Muckle-Wells) require immunomodulatory therapy. IL-1 plays a key role in autoinflammation; identifying its overproduction is crucial in diagnosis. CRP and ESR are easy, accessible lab markers to differentiate urticaria types. New biologics like anti-CKIT antibodies (e.g., barzolvolimab) are promising in depleting mast cells. Wheal appearance, duration, and sensations (itch vs. burn) help guide subtype classification. Cold-induced cholinergic urticaria is an emerging phenotype needing further research. Global registries like CURE are key to improving care for rare urticaria types. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Cold-Induced Problems 03:29 Understanding Atypical Cold Urticaria 06:23 Treatment Options for Cold Urticaria 09:12 Exploring Rare Forms of Cold Urticaria 11:53 The Role of Interleukin-1 in Cold Urticaria 14:40 Differential Diagnosis in Cold Urticaria 17:15 Research and Future Directions in Cold Urticaria Do you have suggestions for future episodes? Please provide feedback and offer your suggestions for future topics and expert selection here.Feedback form:ATU: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://forms.office.com/e/m6a2uEdsUH
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Om All Things Urticaria – Learning about urticaria with Prof. Dr. Torsten Zuberbier

Since 2020 this podcast is an invaluable resource for health care professionals, and anyone interested in learning more about urticaria. In the first 97 episodes, Prof. Marcus Maurer († 31.07.2024) is joined by colleagues for in-depth discussions on the latest research and opinion on the pathogenesis and treatment of urticaria. Prof. Torsten Zuberbier has taken on this role. All opinions expressed are those of the faculty. This content should not be taken as medical advice and is for informational purposes only. Learn more about the network and its activities here: https://ucare-network.com/
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