Litcius/Paper detail

Revisiting X‐linked congenital ichthyosis

Baishun Zhou, Cancan Liang, Peiyao Li, Heng Xiao

2024International Journal of Dermatology9 citationsDOI

Abstract

X-linked recessive ichthyosis (XLI) is a hereditary skin disease characterized by generalized dryness and scaling of the skin, with frequent extracutaneous manifestations. It is the second most common type of ichthyosis, with a prevalence of 1/6,000 to 1/2,000 in males and without any racial or geographical differences. The causative gene for XLI is the steroid sulfatase gene (STS), located on Xp22.3. STS deficiency causes an abnormal cholesterol sulfate (CS) accumulation in the stratum corneum (SC). Excess CS induces epidermal permeability barrier dysfunction and scaling abnormalities. This review summarizes XLI's genetic, clinical, and pathological features, pathogenesis, diagnosis and differential diagnoses, and therapeutic perspectives. Further understanding the role of the STS gene pathogenic variants in XLI may contribute to a more accurate and efficient clinical diagnosis of XLI and provide novel strategies for its treatment and prenatal diagnosis.

Topics & Concepts

IchthyosisSteroid sulfataseMedicineLamellar ichthyosisIchthyosis vulgarisCongenital ichthyosisPathologicalDermatologyDiseaseFilaggrinPrenatal diagnosisHyperkeratosisGeneticsDifferential diagnosisPathologyInternal medicineBiologyAtopic dermatitisPregnancyFetusHormoneSteroidSkin and Cellular Biology ResearchPlant Reproductive BiologyDermatology and Skin Diseases