36 research outputs found

    Plucked hair follicles from patients with chronic discoid lupus erythematosus show a disease-specific molecular signature

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    Objective: When faced with clinical symptoms of scarring alopecia—the standard diagnostic pathway involves a scalp biopsy which is an invasive and expensive procedure. This project aimed to assess if plucked hair follicles (HFs) containing living epithelial cells can offer a non-invasive approach to diagnosing inflammatory scalp lesions. Methods: Lesional and non-lesional HFs were extracted from the scalp of patients with chronic discoid lupus erythematosus (CDLE), psoriasis and healthy controls. RNA was isolated from plucked anagen HFs and microarray, as well as quantitative real-time PCR was performed. Results: Here, we report that gene expression analysis of only a small number of HF plucked from lesional areas of the scalp is sufficient to differentiate CDLE from psoriasis lesions or healthy HF. The expression profile from CDLE HFs coincides with published profiles of CDLE from skin biopsy. Genes that were highly expressed in lesional CDLE corresponded to well-known histopathological diagnostic features of CDLE and included those related to apoptotic cell death, the interferon signature, complement components and CD8+ T-cell immune responses. Conclusions: We therefore propose that information obtained from this non-invasive approach are sufficient to diagnose scalp lupus erythematosus. Once validated in routine clinical settings and compared with other scarring alopecias, this rapid and non-invasive approach will have great potential for paving the way for future diagnosis of inflammatory scalp lesions

    Dermatite seborreica

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    Paraneoplastic immunobullous disease with an epidermolysis bullosa acquisita phenotype: two cases demonstrating remission with treatment of gynaecological malignancy.

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    Two cases of paraneoplastic immunobullous disease occurring in women with gynaecological malignancies are reported. Both cases demonstrated mechanobullous mucocutaneous blistering as is typically seen in epidermolysis bullosa acquisita. Their immunopathology, however, favoured a dermal-binding mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) (or possibly bullous pemphigoid) for patient 1 and laminin-5 MMP for patient 2. Both patients showed resolution of blistering within 1 year of treatment of their malignancies; uterine and ovarian carcinoma, respectively. These cases are of interest because of their paraneoplastic nature; as well as overlapping clinicoimmunopathological features. In addition, patient 2 is, as far as we are aware, the first report of ovarian-carcinoma-associated laminin-5 MMP
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