Monday, March 2, 2020

[考生加油] Dermatological Recall: Chapter 36 :: Sweet Syndrome


史維德氏症候群(Sweet syndrome)是一種伴隨急性發燒、疼痛像水泡之病灶的疾病。對類固醇的治療反應很好。這一直是皮膚科中相當神秘的一種疾病,直到近幾年來隨著對細胞激素(cytokines)的研究漸多,才比較了解可能的致病機轉以及跟其他發炎性疾病/癌症/藥物的關聯。

Chapter 36 :: Sweet Syndrome
:: Philip R. Cohen & Razelle Kurzrock
鄭煜彬(20200301)
DEFINITION

What is the typical features of Sweet syndrome(SS)?
1.          Acute onset of pyrexia & painful skin lesions 
2.          Dense dermal infiltrate of mature neutrophils
3.          Promptly resolve after systemic steroids.
What are the inflammatory (neutrophilic) diseases in dermatology?
SS, pyoderma gangrenosum, subcorneal pustular dermatosis, Bowel bypass syn., erythema elevatum diutinum, neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis, rheumatoid neutrophilic dermatitis, autoinflammatory diseases (Schnitzler syn., Blau syn., PAPA syn., SAPHO syn….)
EPIDEMIOLOGY

What is the common onset age & gender of SS?
30-60 y/o, female
What is 3 types of SS according to the causes?
Classical, malignancy-associated, & drug-induced
CLINICAL FEATURES

HISTORY

What is the general appearance of SS?
Dramatically ill + fever + skin eruption ± arthralgia, general malaise, headache, & myalgia
What is the time sequence between skin eruption of SS & fever?
Concurrently present with the fever or follow the fever by several days to weeks.
CUTANEOUS FINDINGS

LESION MORPHOLOGY

What is the morphology of the lesions of SS
Single or multiple, asymmetrically distributed,  tender, red/purple-red, papules/nodules with transparent, vesicle-like appearance (illusion of vesiculation = edema in the upper dermis)
What is the change of lesions of SS in the later stages?
1.          Central clearingannular or arcuate patterns (targetoid)
2.          Enlargingcoalesce & form irregular sharply bordered plaques
What is the features of malignancy-associated SS?
Bullous or ulcerated lesions, and/or mimic pyoderma gangrenosum.
What is the result of SS lesions?
The lesions resolve without scar.

What is the percentage of SS with recurrence
1/3-2/3 of the cases has recurrent episodes.
CUTANEOUS PATHERGY & ISOTOPIC RESPONSE

What is the cutaneous pathergy of SS?
Skin hypersensitivity at sites of trauma during the episodes of SS= isotopic (Koebner) response
What may induce isotopic response of SS?
Wounds, sunburn(phototoxic reactionphoto distributed), radiation therapy or tattoo
What is the Wolf’s isotopic response of SS?
New lesions at the site of another unrelated & already healed skin disease. (Lymphedematous leg, postmastectomy arm, & zoster. )
What is the other variants of SS?
1.          Pustular dermatosis
2.          Neutrophilic dermatosis of the dorsal hands
3.          Subcutaneous panniculitis
4.          Histiocytoid variant
5.          Giant cellulitis-like variant
What is the features of pustular dermatosis of SS?
Tiny pustules on the tops of red papules or erythematous-based pustules. (±ulcerative colitis:)
What is the features of neutrophilic dermatosis of the dorsal hands of SS?
1.          A localized, pustular variant at dorsal hands.
2.          Rapid resolution under steroids & dapsone.
3.          Concurrent oral mucosa, arm, leg, back, &/or face lesions.
What is the features of subcutaneous panniculitis of SS?
1.          Erythematous, tender dermal nodules on the limbs, mimic erythema nodosum on the legs
2.          In 80% of SS (not rare).
What is the features of histiocytoid variant of SS?
1.          Looks like typical SS, but the dermal infiltrate is composed of “histiocytic” mononuclear cells (presenting immature myeloid cells).
2.          Associated with malignancy
What medicine may induce histiocytoid SS?
Bortezomib
What is the features of giant cellulitis-like variant of  SS?
1.          Relapsing widespread giant lesions
2.          F>>M, 48-72 years (median = 61 years)
3.          Upper leg & buttocks: most common
4.          Patients are obese (2/3) & has cancer (1/2)
What is the features of necrotizing variant of SS?
1.          Rapid onset of edematous, erythematous, warm lesionsnecrotizing fasciitis like lesions
2.          A deep-tissue neutrophilic infiltration + soft-tissue necrosis.
NONCUTANEOUS FINDINGS

What are the sites of non-cutaneous SS?
The bones, CNS/eyes, ears, kidneys, intestines, liver, heart, lung, mouth, muscles, & spleen/lymph nodes
What is the cardiac involvement of SS?
1.          Children: postinflammatory elastolysis (heart & aorta) & Takayasu arteritis. (rare)
2.          Adult: coronary artery occlusion (rare)
What is the CNS involvement (neuro-Sweet disease, nSd) of SS?

1.          Self-remitting/reversible parkinsonism
2.          Eyes: optic nerve involvement + panuveitis, endogenous endophthalmitis + chorioretinitis
3.          Radiation therapy-induced nSd
What is the oral involvement of SS?
1.          Ulcers (in SS with hematologic disorders, uncommon in classical SS, resolve s/p steroid.
What is the otic involvement of SS?
Progressive sensorineural hearing loss
COMPLICATIONS

What are the complications of SS?
1.          Directly related: secondary infections (thus antimicrobial therapy is in need)
2.          Indirectly related: inflammatory bowel disease, sarcoidosis, thyroid dz, & malignancies.
What is the meaning of reappearance of the dermatosis in malignancy-associated SS?
Recurrence of the malignancy
ETIOLOGY AND
PATHOGENESIS

ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS
ASSOCIATED DISEASES

What are the etiologically-related conditions occur before, concurrent with, or following the diagnosis of SS
BRIT. PRICES: Behçet disease, cancer, erythema nodosum, infections, inflammatory bowel disease, pregnancy, relapsing polychondritis, rheumatoid arthritis, sarcoidosis, & thyroid dz
What is the “differentiation syndrome” associated with SS?
An inflammatory reaction withcapillary permeability, in up to 25% of patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia treated with all-trans-retinoic acid.(=retinoic acid syndrome)
What is the associated conditions of histiocytoid variant?
Medications, autoimmune diseases, infections & inflammation, inflammatory bowel disease, & malignancy
What is the associated conditions of giant cellulitis-like variant?
Obesity & malignancy

What is the malignancies in the giant cellulitis-like variant?
Hematologic dyscrasia (multiple myeloma or myelodysplastic syndrome/myeloproliferative disorder) & breast cancer
ASSOCIATED NEUTROPHILIC
DERMATOSES

What is the characteristic of neutrophilic dermatoses?
An inflammatory infiltrate of mature PMN.
What is the associated neutrophilic dermatoses of SS?
Erythema elevatum diutinum, neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis, pyoderma gangrenosum, subcorneal pustular dermatosis, &/or vasculitis.
How to differentiate SS & other neutrophilic dermatoses?
According to the location of the lesions.
CONCURRENT LEUKEMIA CUTIS

What are the relationship between SS & other malignancies?
1.          SS exist as a paraneoplastic syndrome
2.          SS appears with hematologic disorders concurrently.
What is the most frequent hematologic dyscrasias associated with leukemia cutis (abnormal Nφ) & SS (mature PMN)?
1.          Acute myelocytic leukemia & acute promyelocytic leukemia
2.          (Less common) myelodysplastic syndrome, chronic myelogenous leukemia, myelogenous leukemia
What are the culprit drugs of SS?  
All-trans-retinoic acid, bortezomib, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), or imatinib mesylate
What is the most notorious drug to induce SS?
G-CSF
What is the mechanisms of concurrent Sweet syndrome & leukemia cutis?
1.          Secondary leukemia cutis: the circulating immature myeloid precursor cells are recruited to the inflammatory oncotactic environment stimulated by SS.
2.          Primary leukemia cutis: the leukemic cells constitute the bonified incipient, or G-CSF induced differentiation of atypical leukemia cells into mature Nφ. 
What is the most threatening associated disease of SS?  
Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)
PATHOGENESIS

What is the possible causes of SS?
1.          A hypersensitivity reaction to an eliciting bacterial, viral, or tumor antigen (preceding febrile URI or tonsillitis, SS with Yersinia enterocolitica improves after antibiotic )
2.          HLA serotypes: non-B54 types HLA
3.          Cytokines: IL-1, 3, 6, 8, 17, & TNF-α, IFN-γ, G-CSF & IL-6(MDS-associated SS), GM-CSF (classical SS), G-CSF (acute myelogenous leukemia-associated SS & neutrophilic panniculitis)
4.          CD4+ T-cell dysfunction(TH1)
5.          Autoantibodies to neutrophilic cytoplasmic antigens
What disease resemble SS and may share the same pathogenesis?
Familial Mediterranean fever: share the same mutated gene with chronic myelogenous leukemia associated SS.
PHOTOSENSITIVITY

What drug may induce photodrug-associated SS?
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole
Why does UV(B) induce SS?   
1.          UV(B) induces isomorphic(Koebner) reaction
2.          UV(B) induces Nφ& production of TNF-α & IL-8.
DIAGNOSIS
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA

What is the diagnostic criteria for classical SS?
1           Abrupt onset of painful erythematous plaques or nodules
2           Hx: a dense Nφinfiltrate w/o LCV
3           Pyrexia >38°C (100.4°F)
4           Association with an underlying
4.1         hematologic (AML)
4.2         visceral malignancy (GU organs, breast, & GI), inflammatory dz (Crohn dz & ulcerative colitis)
4.3         pregnancy
4.4         preceded by an upper respiratory (streptococcosis) or GI (salmonellosis & yersiniosis) infection or vaccination
5           Excellent response to systemic corticosteroids or potassium iodide(KI)
6           Abnormal Lab values at presentation (3 of 4): ESR >20 mm/h; CRP(+); >8000/µL leukocytes; >70% Nφ
What is the diagnostic criteria for drug-induced SS?
1, 2, 3 as classical SS
4. Temporal relationship between drug & clinical presentation, or temporally related recurrence after oral challenge
5. Temporally related resolution of lesions after drug withdrawal or tx with systemic steroid
SUPPORTIVE STUDIES

LABORATORY TESTING

What should we check in SS?
CBC/DC(Peripheral leukocytosis + neutrophilia, -penia in malignancy), ESR/CRP(), GOT/GPT(), CREA/BUN(), urinalysis(hematuria and proteinuria), thyroid function(hypo- or hyper-), CSF analysis.
PATHOLOGY

What is the features of pathology of SS?
A diffuse/dense infiltrate of mature Nφ is present in the papillary and upper reticular dermis, even in epidermis(spongiosis/subcorneal pustules) or adipose tissue ± secondary LCV (no fibrin deposition & Nφ in the wall) ± concurrent leukemia cutis
What study should be performed with the biopsy?
Bacterial, fungal, mycobacterial, & viral culture
What is the features of histiocytoid SS?
Dermal infiltrate composed of immature granulocytes (histiocytic mononuclear cells, similar to Nφ but has CD15, 43, 45 (LCA), 68, HAM56, lysozyme, & MAC 387)
What cells are contained in the infiltrate of SS?
Nφ(mature or abnormal), lymphocytes or histiocytes, Eφ(drug-induced or malignancy-associated)
IMAGING

What image study should be performed in SS?
Brain: PET/CT, CT, MRI, EEG, MRI
Neutrophilic fasciitis/musculoskeletal: MRI
Pleural effusions: CXR
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

CLINICAL DIFFERENTIAL
DIAGNOSIS

What are the differential diagnoses of SS?
infectious & inflammatory disorders, neoplastic conditions, reactive erythemas, vasculitis, Behçet disease, azathioprine hypersensitivity reaction, chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy & elevated temperature (CANDLE) syndrome, & gemcitabine-associated Sweet syndrome-like eruptions, arthropod bite
How to differentiate Behçet disease & Sweet syndrome?
Human leukocyte antigen analysis
B51: Behçet disease; B54: SS
What are the differential diagnoses of giant cellulitis-like SS?
Cellulitis & periodic syndromes (such as familial Mediterranean fever)

HISTOLOGIC DIFFERENTIAL
DIAGNOSIS

How to differentiate SS & leukemia cutis?
Leukemia cutis has malignant immature leukocytes.
How to differentiate SS & neutrophilic lobular pannicu
litis?
SS had infiltratein the lobules, the septae, or both.
What diseases should be differentiate with histiocytoid SS?
Leukemia cutis, interstitial type of granuloma annulare, interstitial granulomatous dermatitis with arthritis, & methotrexate-induced rheumatoid papules
CLINICAL COURSE AND
PROGNOSIS

What is the natural course of SS ?
Resolves spontaneously, but lesions persist for weeks to months.
What is the course of malignancy-associated or drug-induced SS?
Clearing after successful management of the cancer or discontinuation of the associated medication.
What is the successful management of tonsillitis, solid tumors, or renal failure-induced SS?
Surgical excision or transplantation of kidney.
What patients has higher recurrence of SS?
Malignancy-associated SS.
MANAGEMENT
MEDICATIONS
FIRST-LINE TREATMENTS

What is the first line treatments of SS?
Systemic/topical/IL corticosteroids, potassium iodide & colchicine
How to treat refractory SS with steroids?
Daily, IV pulse methylprednisolone
How to treat localized SS with steroids?
Topical (0.05% clobetasol propionate) or IL (triamcinolone acetonide, 3-10 mg/cc)
What is the side effects of KI?
Vasculitis & hypothyroidism
What is the side effects of colchicine?
GI symptoms: diarrhea, abdominal pain, nausea & vomiting
What is the dose of KI tablet?
300 mg enteric-coated tablet, 1 tablet tid (900mg/day)
What is the usage of SSKI (saturated solution of KI,  Lugol's solution)
1 drop = 0.05 ml
3 drops tid (450mg/day)→↑by 1drop 3 times each day7-10 drops tid (1050-1500 mg/day)
What is the concentration of SSKI in SS?
1 g KI /ml of water(1 drop = 0.05 ml = 50mg)
SECOND-LINE TREATMENTS

What drugs can be second-line treatments of SS(4)?
Indomethacin, clofazimine, cyclosporine, & dapsone
Which 2 drugs can be used in the combination therapy with steroids?
Cyclosporine & dapsone
ANTIBIOTICS

What are the proper antibiotics used in the treatment of SS-related infections?  
Secondarily impetiginized lesions: abx for S. aureus
Inflammatory bowel disease: metronidazole
Yersinia or Chlamydia: doxycycline, minocycline,
or tetracycline
OTHER AGENTS

What are other choice of treatments of SS?
l   Antineoplastic (azacitidine, chlorambucil, cyclophosphamide, & rituximab)
l   TNF inhibitors (adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab, & thalidomide)
l   Miscellaneous: danazol, etretinate, hepatitis therapy, IVIG, IFN-α, Anakinra(+steroid)
MALIGNANCY WORKUP

Why should we work up malignancies in patients with SS?
Neoplasms concurrently present or subsequently develop in previously cancer-free SS


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