445 research outputs found

    Autoimmune bullous diseases in childhood

    Get PDF
    Autoimmune bullous diseases (AIBDs) rarely occur in childhood and in contrast to the chronic disease course in adults, often have a milder clinical course, a better treatment response and better prognosis. Although literature is scarce, several case reports and case series describe childhood cases of linear IgA disease, bullous pemphigoid, dermatitis herpetiformis, mucous membrane pemphigoid, epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, pemphigus vulgaris, pemphigus foliaceus and paraneoplastic pemphigus. Misdiagnosis and consequently delay in diagnosis is common in childhood AIBD with often initial diagnoses of infectious causes, such as hand-foot-mouth disease or impetigo bullosa. Clinical features of childhood AIBDs may overlap between subtypes, like adult cases, but the differential diagnosis is different in childhood. Another difference between the adult and childhood bullous pemphigoid is the mainly acral distribution of bullous lesions in children and the prognosis of the disease. Bullous pemphigoid and linear IgA disease might possibly be drug-induced or triggered by vaccination.</p

    Novel insights into the epidemiology of epidermolysis bullosa (EB) from the Dutch EB Registry:EB more common than previously assumed?

    Get PDF
    Background Epidermolysis bullosa (EB) is a heterogeneous group of rare and incurable genetic disorders characterized by fragility of the skin and mucosae, resulting in blisters and erosions. Several epidemiological studies in other populations have been carried out, reporting varying and sometimes inconclusive figures, highlighting the need for standardized epidemiological analyses in well-characterized cohorts. Objectives To evaluate the epidemiological data on EB in the Netherlands, extracted from the molecularly well-characterized cohort in the Dutch EB Registry. Methods In this observational study all EB-patients that were based in the Netherlands and captured in the Dutch EB Registry between 1988 and 2018 were included. The epidemiological outcomes were based on complete diagnostic data (clinical features, immunofluorescence, electron microscopy and mutation analysis), with longitudinal follow-up. Results A total of 464 EB-patients (287 families) were included. The incidence and point-prevalence of EB in the Netherlands were 41.3 per million live births and 22.4 per million population, respectively. EB Simplex (EBS), Junctional EB (JEB), Dystrophic EB (DEB) and Kindler EB were diagnosed in 45.7%, 18.8%, 34.7% and 0.9% of the EB-patients, respectively, with an incidence and point-prevalence of 17.5 and 11.9 (EBS), 9.3 and 2.1 (JEB), 14.1 and 8.3 (DEB), 0.5 and 0.2 (Kindler EB). In 90.5% of the EB-patients the diagnosis was genetically confirmed. During the investigated time period 73 EB-patients died, 72.6% of whom as a direct consequence of their EB. Conclusion The epidemiological outcomes of EB in the Netherlands are high, attributed to a high detection rate in a well-organized set-up, indicating that EB might be more common than previously assumed. These epidemiological data help to understand the extensive need for (specialized) medical care of EB-patients and is invaluable for the design and execution of therapeutic trials. This study emphasizes the importance of thorough reporting systems and registries worldwide

    The C4EB study—Transvamix (10% THC / 5% CBD) to treat chronic pain in epidermolysis bullosa:A protocol for an explorative randomized, placebo controlled, and double blind intervention crossover study

    Get PDF
    Patients with the genetic blistering skin condition epidermolysis bullosa (EB) report severe pain as a consequence of skin and mucous membrane lesions including blisters, wounds, and scars. Adequate symptom alleviation is not often achieved using conventional pharmacologic interventions. Finding novel approaches to pain care in EB is imperative to improve the quality of life of patients living with EB. There are several anecdotal reports on the use of cannabinoid-based medicines (CBMs) by EB patients to reduce the burden of symptoms. However, controlled clinical investigations assessing these reported effects are lacking. As the pain quality “unpleasantness” delineates EB pain, we hypothesize the modulation of affective pain processing in the brain by way of intervention with CBMs comprising the cannabinoids Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiol—objectified by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The C4EB study is an investigator-initiated, single-centre, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled and crossover trial. Adult patients with the diagnosis epidermolysis bullosa, reporting chronic pain will be eligible to participate. Following baseline measurements, participants will be randomized to receive the sublingually administered interventions placebo and Transvamix(®) in forward or reversed orders, each for two weeks and separated by a washout. The primary outcome is the difference in numeric rating scale pain scores between grouped interventions, using affective descriptors within the Short-form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2. Secondary outcomes include pain self-efficacy, concomitant analgesic medication-use and adverse events. Additionally, fMRI will be employed to assess brain connectivity related to neuroanatomic pain circuits at baseline, placebo and Transvamix(®) interventions. The study was approved by the ethical committee at the University Medical Center of Groningen in the Netherlands. Results will be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal. Trial registration number: Netherlands Trial Register: NL9347 (Acronym: C4EB)

    Insights into clinical and diagnostic findings as well as treatment responses in patients with mucous membrane pemphigoid:A retrospective cohort study

    Get PDF
    Background: The variable clinical severity of mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) often leads to diagnostic and therapeutic delays. Objective: To describe the characteristics of a large cohort of patients with MMP. Methods: A retrospective review of clinical and diagnostic characteristics as well as treatment responses in 145 patients with MMP. Results: Monosite involvement was seen in 41.4% and multisite involvement in 58.6% of the patients. The oral mucosa was affected in 86.9% of the patients, followed by the ocular mucosa (30.3%), skin (26.2%), genital mucosa (25.5%), nasal mucosa (23.4%), and pharyngeal and/or laryngeal mucosa (17.2%). Ocular disease developed during the disease course in 41.7% of patients with initially other mucosal site involvement. The malignancy rate was significantly higher in patients with autoantibodies against laminin-332 than in patients with MMP without laminin-332 autoantibodies (35.3% vs 10.9%, respectively; P = .007). Systemic immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory therapy was administered to 77.1% of the patients, mainly to patients with multisite (P Limitations: Retrospective design. Conclusion: Patients with MMP present with a heterogeneous clinical presentation, and new symptoms may develop during the disease course. Cancer screening should be considered for patients with MMP and, in particular, for those with autoantibodies against laminin-332
    • …
    corecore