Institutionen för medicin, Huddinge Sjukhus / Department of Medicine at Huddinge University Hospital
Abstract
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory disease of mainly
unknown aetiology which in most cases involves axillae or groins and that
can last for decades. In this thesis different clinical aspects of HS are
studied: development of a clinical scoring system, relation to smoking
and obesity, outcome of laser surgery, bacteraemia in HS patients and
distribution of the neuroendocrine marker protein gene product (PGP) 9.5
in HS skin biopsies. In Paper I the objective is to evaluate the modified
Hidradenitis Suppurativa Score (HSS) and to study the impact of BMI and
smoking habits on disease severity. Altogether 246 HS patients completed
the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) questionnaire and 115 were
scored by HSS. Points were given for regions, types of lesion (nodules,
fistulas), total area involved, and whether lesions were separated by
normal skin. A positive correlation of fair degree between HSS and DLQI
was found, as well as significant higher median scores in more advanced
HS, in smokers compared to non smokers and in obese women compared to
those of normal weight, respectively. The results indicate that the HSS
reflects disease severity, and may be a relevant outcome measure in
clinical trials. In Paper II scanner-assisted carbon dioxide laser
treatment with subsequent healing by secondary intention is evaluated in
34 HS patients, with in total 67 operating sites. They were interviewed
by telephone about recurrences and end results, after a mean follow-up
time of 34.5 (range 7 87) months. Four patients had had recurrences in
one of the treated areas. In twelve cases, lesions had developed
separated from the initial surgical site by >5 cm. Twenty-five patients
had flare-ups of HS lesions in another anatomical region. Eight had no
symptoms of HS at all during the follow-up period. Mean healing time was
4 (range 3 5) weeks. The conclusion is that scanner-assisted carbon
dioxide laser treatment of HS is an efficient treatment, well accepted by
the patients. In Paper III the objective is to determine the number and
type of bacteria circulating in the bloodstream in HS patients undergoing
carbon dioxide laser surgery. Blood samples were taken before, during and
after surgery in 21 patients with HS Hurley stage II, and from five
healthy controls. Bacterial growth in the first blood sample was found in
nine patients, from the second in ten and from the third in six. In one
patient, bacteria were detected in all the three samples. The dominating
bacteria were coagulase- negative staphylococci, of which most were
subtyped as S. warneri. In six patients all samples were negative, which
may indicate that the method of surgery itself caused no spread of
bacteria. In Paper IV the presence and distribution of the nerve
fibre-marker PGP 9.5 is investigated by immunohistochemistry. Biopsies
were taken from the groin or axilla of 16 HS patients and 12 healthy
controls. The median number of PGP 9.5 positive profiles was decreased in
lesional epidermis, yet statistically significant only in the groin. A
similar difference was found in lesional dermis of the axilla, whereas in
the lesional upper dermis of the groin the median number of profiles was
increased. Cells with strong PGP 9.5 immunofluorescence were few or
absent in epidermis, but significantly increased in lesional dermal skin
of the groin. It is possible that PGP 9.5 positive nerve fibres and cells
have pathological roles in HS, but further investigations are needed