Rosacea Review

Rosacea Review

Winter 2007


National Rosacea Society Awards New Grants for Rosacea Research

The National Rosacea Society (NRS) has awarded funding for five new studies as part of its research grants program to advance scientific knowledge of the potential causes and other key aspects of this chronic and potentially life-disruptive disorder that affects an estimated 14 million Americans.

"We are extremely grateful to the many thousands of rosacea patients whose donations are used to fund this important research grants program," said Dr. Jonathan Wilkin, chairman of the NRS medical advisory board, which reviews and selects the research proposals for funding. "Study results to date are leading to important advances in the understanding of rosacea, and we are hopeful that these findings will result in significant improvements in its effective management and potential prevention or cure."

Dr. Sandra Cremers, assistant professor of ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School, was awarded $25,000 for a study evaluating the role of angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation) in ocular rosacea. Dr. Cremers will investigate the levels of angiogenesis markers, such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), in the conjunctiva and eyelids of patients with severe ocular rosacea, compared with normal subjects. She postulates that defining the role of angiogenesis in the development of ocular rosacea may bring focus to future research on this common rosacea subtype, and eventually lead to the development of an effective treatment.

Dr. Richard Gallo, chief of the division of dermatology at the University of California - San Diego, and Dr. Kenshi Yamasaki of the Veterans Medical Research Foundation were awarded $25,000 to continue their NRS-funded research of how cathelicidins, one of the body's own natural antibiotics, may play a role in the development of rosacea symptoms.

The investigators most recently determined that an excess of an enzyme in the facial skin of rosacea patients leads to an accumulation of cathelicidins, an antimicrobial peptide that can cause inflammation and increased blood vessel growth. In a new study, they will be investigating the causes of this enzymatic abnormality and testing whether this enzyme may be a key cause of rosacea.

Dr. Richard Granstein, chairman of dermatology at Cornell University, and colleagues were awarded $25,000 to continue their research on the role of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), an agent produced by nerves that earlier NRS-funded studies had shown initiates an inflammatory response in human dermal endothelial cells. The researchers will also expand their study to examine whether three other agents produced by nerves elicit effects similar to ATP, and will test whether therapeutic agents for rosacea work by inhibiting the expression of inflammation-causing molecules by endothelial cells.

Dr. Kent T. Keyser, professor of vision sciences at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, received $25,000 to study the effects of nicotine on rosacea. Because previous research has shown that nicotine can cause new blood vessels to form in the skin, Dr. Keyser plans to investigate which intracellular signaling pathways are affected and which cellular mechanisms may cause a reaction in rosacea. In addition, Dr. Keyser will examine the short- and long-term effects of nicotine on gene expression and transcription as they may relate to the development of rosacea.

Dr. Martin Steinhoff, department of dermatology, University of Muenster, Germany, was awarded $25,000 to study the role of neuroimmune interactions in the pathophysiology of rosacea. In the new study, the researchers will examine whether the ineffective interaction between neuropeptide receptors and neuropeptide-degrading enzymes results in dysregulation and contributes to the development of rosacea.