# Harnessing Digital Pathology Tools to Distinguish Hand Eczema From Palmar Psoriasis: A Quantitative Approach

**Authors:** Melissa Sari, Stefan Schliep, Anne Petzold, Franklin Kiesewetter, Michael Erdmann, Michael Sticherling, Carola Berking, Markus V. Heppt, Elias A. T. Koch

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/cup.70064 · Journal of Cutaneous Pathology · 2026-02-05

## TL;DR

This study uses digital tools to accurately distinguish hand eczema from palmar psoriasis by analyzing specific skin tissue features.

## Contribution

The study introduces a quantitative method using digital pathology tools to differentiate two skin conditions with overlapping features.

## Key findings

- Suprapapillary epidermal thickness was significantly lower in psoriasis compared to eczema.
- Rete ridge elongation and width showed significant differences between the two conditions.
- S100-positive cells in the epidermis were more common in eczema than in psoriasis.

## Abstract

Distinguishing hand eczema from palmar psoriasis is a common diagnostic challenge due to overlapping clinical and histopathological features.

This study aimed to validate morphological and immunohistochemical criteria for differentiating these two conditions using the digital pathology tools QuPath and ImageJ.

One hundred forty‐two histological samples with confirmed clinical diagnoses were stained with hematoxylin and eosin and subjected to immunohistochemical staining for CD3, CD15, CD20, CD123, S100, and PHH3. The samples were digitized for analysis. QuPath was used to automate annotation, segment epidermal layers, and measure rete ridge elongation, width, and suprapapillary epidermal thickness. Immunohistochemical markers were also analyzed using QuPath. ImageJ was employed to quantify spongiosis using color thresholding techniques.

Suprapapillary epidermal thickness was significantly lower in psoriasis compared to eczema (p < 0.001; AUC = 0.72). Rete ridge elongation (p = 0.002; AUC = 0.704) and width (p < 0.001; AUC = 0.698) also showed significant differences. Furthermore, hypogranulosis was more pronounced in psoriasis (p = 0.012; AUC = 0.602), while S100‐positive cells in the epidermis were more commonly observed in eczema (p = 0.013; AUC = 0.583).

Quantitative assessment of suprapapillary epidermal thickness and rete ridge morphology offers a reliable and objective method for differentiating palmar psoriasis from hand eczema, enhancing diagnostic accuracy.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** cd.3 (Cd.3 conserved hypothetical protein), FUT4 (fucosyltransferase 4), MS4A1 (membrane spanning 4-domains A1), IL3RA (interleukin 3 receptor subunit alpha), S100A1 (S100 calcium binding protein A1)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** FUT4 (fucosyltransferase 4) [NCBI Gene 2526] {aka CD15, ELFT, FCT3A, FUC-TIV, FUTIV, LeX}, IL3RA (interleukin 3 receptor subunit alpha) [NCBI Gene 3563] {aka CD123, IL-3R-alpha, IL3R, IL3RAY, IL3RX, IL3RY}, KRT20 (keratin 20) [NCBI Gene 54474] {aka CD20, CK-20, CK20, K20, KRT21}, S100A1 (S100 calcium binding protein A1) [NCBI Gene 6271] {aka S100, S100-alpha, S100A}
- **Diseases:** Palmar Psoriasis (MESH:D011565), Hand Eczema (MESH:D004485)

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13040410/full.md

## References

26 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13040410/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13040410