9 research outputs found
Rifampicin-Induced Thrombocytopenia: A Case Report and Short Review of the Literature
Thrombocytopenia may be associated with a variety of conditions and risks depending on its severity, ranging from mild epistaxis to life-threating bleeding. Many drugs or herbal remedies can cause thrombocytopenia by either inhibiting platelet production and/or enhancing their destruction from the peripheral blood mediated via an immunological mechanism implicating drug-dependent antibodies. The latter entity is called drug-induced immune thrombocytopenia: a life-threatening, under-recognised condition, which is often a diagnostic challenge. Rifampicin is a widely used, well-tolerated, and effective bactericidal drug. Adverse events, except for gastrointestinal effects, headache, skin rash, and pruritus, are uncommon. The authors herein report on a patient with isolated thrombocytopenia with a recent medical history of brucellosis on rifampicin and doxycycline. Thrombocytopenia was proved to be rifampicin-induced. Also presented is a short review of the literature on this rare subject, which should be of great importance to clinicians
Sustained Regression of Hydroxycarbamide Induced Actinic Keratoses after Switching to Anagrelide
Hydroxycarbamide (HC) is the first-line treatment for certain myeloproliferative neoplasms, such as polycythemia vera and essential thrombocytosis (ET). In a subset of these patients long-term treatment with HC can result in the development of confluent actinic keratoses (AK) followed by invasive keratinocytic carcinomas (âsquamous dysplasiaâ), preferentially on sun-exposed skin. Discontinuation or dose reduction of HC may result in partial improvement. A 59-year-old farmer after 14 years on HC (2âgr/d) and acetylsalicylic acid (100âmg/d) for ET, was referred for numerous, hyperkeratotic AK on face, scalp, and hands that could not be controlled with repeated (N=15) cryosurgery sessions in the previous 3 years. Acitretin (0.32âmg/kg daily) and topical treatments (cryosurgery with ingenol mebutate) were initiated with only marginal improvement after 3 months. Acitretin dose was doubled and HC was switched to anagrelide (0.5âmg twice daily). Within a month the AK load regressed significantly and, at 3 months follow-up, complete clinical remission was achieved and acitretin was discontinued. Twenty months later the patient is clear from AK. In conclusion, the impressive and sustainable AK remission under anagrelide draws attention to a possible role of the phosphodiesterase 3 pathway, the major pharmacological target of anagrelide, as a potential therapeutic target for keratinocytic cancers
CD5-Positive Primary Cutaneous Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma-Leg Type
Most primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (PCBCL) are CD5 negative, and only a few cases were found to express CD5. We report the first well-documented CD5+ primary cutaneous diffuse large B-cell lymphoma-leg type (PCDLBCL-LT). A 71-year-old woman with a history of Multiple Sclerosis was admitted because of a nodule at the left thigh. Histological examination of the skin biopsy disclosed a diffuse dermal infiltration by large lymphoid cells. Immunohistochemistry revealed that these large cells were positive for CD5, CD20, CD79a, MUM1/IRF4, Bcl6, Bcl2, and cytoplasmic IgM/λ, whereas CD3, CD56, CD23, CD21, CD10, CD30, cyclin D1, CD68, lysozyme, myeloperoxidase, and CD34 were not detected. Thus, the diagnosis of a CD5+ PCDLBCL-LT was made. Despite treatment, the patient died 11 months after initial diagnosis
Plasmablastic Lymphoma with Coexistence of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia in an Immunocompetent Patient: A Case Report and Mini-Review
Background. Plasmablastic lymphoma (PBL) is a rare, aggressive B-cell lymphoma with poor prognosis usually found in the oral cavity of HIV-positive patients. Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is an indolent B-cell lymphoma with a variable clinical course. Transformation of CLL to PBL as Richterâs syndrome is rare while coexistence of CLL and PBL at diagnosis is even rarer. Case Report. We describe a case of a male immunocompetent patient with an ileum-cecum valve mass and a soft tissue mass at the left humerus with histologic evidence of PBL with coexistence of CLL in the bone marrow and peripheral blood. Amputation of the patientâs left arm was inevitable, and the patient was started on bortezomib and dexamethasone. However, prolonged hospitalization was complicated by aspiration pneumonia, and the patient passed away. Conclusions. No standard of care exists for patients with PBL, and prognosis remains dismal. Concomitant presentation of hematological malignancies becomes increasingly recognized, and further insight is needed in order to delineate whether they originate from the same clone or from different ones
Obesity in Children and Adolescents during COVID-19 Pandemic
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has led to special circumstances and changes to everyday life due to the worldwide measures that were imposed such as lockdowns. This review aims to evaluate obesity in children, adolescents and young adults during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: A literature search was conducted to evaluate pertinent studies up to 10 November 2020. Results: A total of 15 articles were eligible; 9 identified 17,028,111 children, adolescents and young adults from 5â25 years old, 5 pertained to studies with an age admixture (n = 20,521) and one study included parents with children 5â18 years old (n = 584). During the COVID-19 era, children, adolescents and young adults gained weight. Changes in dietary behaviors, increased food intake and unhealthy food choices including potatoes, meat and sugary drinks were noted during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Food insecurity associated with financial reasons represents another concern. Moreover, as the restrictions imposed reduced movements out of the house, physical activity was limited, representing another risk factor for weight gain. Conclusions: COVID-19 restrictions disrupted the everyday routine of children, adolescents and young adults and elicited changes in their eating behaviors and physical activity. To protect them, health care providers should highlight the risk of obesity and provide prevention strategies, ensuring also parental participation. Worldwide policies, guidelines and precautionary measures should ideally be established
CD56 expression in multiple myeloma: Correlation with poor prognostic markers but no effect on outcome
CD56 or neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is a membrane glycoprotein
expressed on neural cells, muscle tissues and myeloma cells. Expression
of CD56 has been studied in patients with multiple myeloma (MM) with
controversial results. The scope of this study was to examine the
expression of CD56 in MM patients at diagnosis and investigate its
association with clinicopathologic parameters. We retrospectively
collected and analyzed data from 109 patients with MM diagnosed over the
last decade (January 2010 to June 2020). Expression of CD56 was assessed
by immunohistochemistry in bone marrow biopsies and investigated its
association with a variety of clinicopathological parameters. For the
statistical analysis chi(2) test and Mann-Whitney U tests were used to
compare categorical and continuous variables in CD56+ and CD56-
patients, respectively. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS
21.0 for Windows (SPSS, Chicago, IL). Based on the expression of CD56
the patient population was divided to CD56+ patients and CD56- patients;
Sixty-eight patients were CD56 + and 41 patients were CD56-. Absence of
CD56 expression was associated with unfavorable prognostic parameters
such as elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and beta 2-microglobulin
levels, advanced stage according to the International Staging System
(ISS) and clonal bone marrow plasma cell infiltration >= 60%, but no
effect on outcome, while the expression of CD56 was associated with well
differentiated neoplastic plasma cells. Our study confirmed that lack of
CD56 expression is a possible marker of poor prognosis in patients with
MM. The detection of CD56 expression by either immunohistochemistry or
flow cytometry is simple and cheap, and it could be incorporated in
future prognostic or predictive scores. Prospective studies are needed
in order to evaluate the role of expression of CD56 as a predictive
biomarker in the era of novel regimens
Realâworld complication burden and disease management paradigms in transfusionârelated ÎČâthalassaemia in Greece: Results from ULYSSES, an epidemiological, multicentre, retrospective crossâsectional study
Abstract Patients with transfusionâdependent beta (ÎČ)âthalassaemia experience a broad range of complications. ULYSSES, an epidemiological, multicentre, retrospective crossâsectional study, aimed to assess the prevalence and severity of treatment and disease complications, capture disease management and identify predictors of complications in patients with transfusionâdependent ÎČâthalassaemia, treated in routine settings in Greece. Eligible patients were adults diagnosed with ÎČâthalassaemia â„12 months before enrolment and having received â„6 red blood cell (RBC) units (excluding elective surgery) with no transfusionâfree period â„35 days in the 24Â weeks before enrolment. Primary data were collected at a single visit and through chart review. Between Oct 21, 2019, and Jun 15, 2020, 201 eligible patients [median (interquartile range, IQR) age 45.7 (40.2â50.5) years; 75.6%Â >Â 40 years old; 64.2% female] were enrolled, a mean (standard deviation) of 42.9 (7.8) years after diagnosis. Median (IQR) age at diagnosis and RBC transfusion initiation were 0.8 (0.4â2.8) and 1.3 (1.0â5.0) years, respectively. From diagnosis to enrolment, patients had developed a median of six (range: 1â55) complications; 19.6% were grade â„3. The most represented complications were endocrine/metabolic/nutrition disorders (91.5%), surgical/medical procedures (67.7%) and blood/lymphatic system disorders (64.7%). Realâworld data generated by ULYSSES underscore the substantial complication burden of transfusionâdependent ÎČâthalassaemia patients, routinely managed in Greece