Increased risk of anxiety and coping strategies in patients with selected genodermatoses with cornification disruption
Magdalena Fryze, Radoslaw Mlak, Aleksandra Kulbaka, Katarzyna Wertheim-Tysarowska, Dariusz Matosiuk, Aldona Pietrzak

TL;DR
Patients with genodermatoses face higher anxiety and use more emotion-focused coping strategies compared to healthy individuals.
Contribution
This study identifies increased anxiety risk and coping patterns in patients with Mendelian Disorders of cornification.
Findings
Patients with MeDOC had 4 times higher risk of high trait anxiety compared to controls.
Emotion-oriented coping was 11 times more common in MeDOC patients than in controls.
No demographic or clinical factors correlated with anxiety levels or avoidant coping.
Abstract
People with genodermatoses face physical pain, social discrimination, and daily life challenges, all of which have an impact on their emotional and psychological well-being. The assessment of anxiety and the development of coping strategies are crucial. This study aimed to compare state and trait anxiety between healthy adults (n = 30) and patients with Mendelian Disorders of cornification (MeDOC) (n = 29). Using the State and Trait Anxiety Inventory and Coping in Stressful Situations Questionnaire, we compared anxiety levels and coping strategies between patients with MeDOC and healthy controls. Given the rarity of MeDOC, the study group is small, but the findings are highly relevant and can significantly improve patients’ well-being. Average or high levels of trait anxiety were significantly more common in the study group compared to the control group (25 vs. 18 cases; 86.2% vs. 60%,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSkin and Cellular Biology Research · Dermatological and Skeletal Disorders · Genetic and rare skin diseases.
