| Literature DB >> 29186863 |
Giovanni Paolino1,2, Dario Didona3, Giuseppe Magliulo4, Giannicola Iannella5, Biagio Didona6, Santo Raffaele Mercuri7, Elisa Moliterni8, Michele Donati9, Andrea Ciofalo10, Guido Granata11, Patricia Ranuzzi12, Vincenzo Falasca13, Stefano Calvieri14.
Abstract
Paraneoplastic pemphigus is a rare autoimmune skin disease that is always associated with a neoplasm. Usually, oral, skin, and mucosal lesions are the earliest manifestations shown by paraneoplastic pemphigus patients. The pathogenesis of paraneoplastic pemphigus is not yet completely understood, although some immunological aspects have been recently clarified. Because of its rarity, several diagnostic criteria have been proposed. Besides, several diagnostic procedures have been used for the diagnosis, including indirect immunofluorescence, direct immunofluorescence, and ELISA. We reviewed the most recent literature, searching on PubMed "paraneoplastic pemphigus". We included also papers in French, German, and Spanish. We found 613 papers for "paraneoplastic pemphigus". Among them, 169 were review papers. Because of its varying clinical features, paraneoplastic pemphigus still represents a challenge for clinicians. Furthermore, diagnosis and management of paraneoplastic pemphigus requires close collaboration between physicians, including dermatologist, oncologist, and otorhinolaryngologist.Entities:
Keywords: oncology; oral lesions; paraneoplastic pemphigus; therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29186863 PMCID: PMC5751135 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18122532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Paraneoplastic pemphigus (PNP) oral lesions. Ulceration involve oral mucosal surface and tongue. Stomatitis is also visible.
Figure 2PNP peri-oral lesions. Ulceration with crusting over the peri-oral region and lips.
Figure 3PNP skin lesions. Diffuse erythema, exfoliative erythroderma, erosions, or ulcerations on the trunk and abdomen.
Figure 4PNP head and neck lesions. Erythema and ulceration with oozing and crusting.
Figure 5Intense, band-like inflammatory infiltrate, with minimal supra-basal acantholysis (H&E, magnification 20×).
Figure 6Basal cell vacuolar degeneration, dyskeratotic and necrotic keratinocytes, lymphocytic inflammation with lymphocytic exocytosis. (H&E, magnification 30×).
Figure 7Direct immunofluorescence shows IgG deposition in the epidermal intercellular spaces and in the basement membrane (20×).
Diagnostic criteria [1,12,75].
| Parameter | Criterion |
|---|---|
| Painful erosions involving mucosae with or without a multiform skin eruption producing blisters and erosions, occurring in association with an occult or evident neoplasm | |
| Suprabasal intraepithelial acantholysis, vacuolar interface changes, necrosis of individual keratinocytes, and/or lichenoid inflammation | |
| Combined presence of IgG and complement (C3) granular-linear deposition within the epidermal intercellular spaces and along the basement-membrane zone | |
| Presence of circulating antibodies that target the intercellular zone of stratified squamous or transitional epithelia | |
| Typical complex of proteins, including desmoplakin I (250 kD), bullous pemphigoid antigen (230 kD), envoplakin (210 kD), desmoplakin II (210 kD), periplakin (190 kD) and α-2-macroglobulin-like-1 (170 kD) |
Resume of PNP diagnostic algorithm.
| CLINIC | Bullous Lesions on Skin and Mucous Membranes | |
|---|---|---|
| PATHOLOGY | Acantholysis (intraepidermal bulla) | Sub-epidermal cleavage |
| DIF | Combined presence of IgG and complement (C3) granular-linear deposition within the epidermal intercellular spaces and along the basement-membrane zone | |
| IIF | Presence of circulating antibodies that target the intercellular zone of stratified squamous or transitional epithelia | |
| LABORATORY | AAB directed to several proteins, including desmoplakin I (250 kD), bullous pemphigoid antigen (230 kD), envoplakin (210 kD), desmoplakin II (210 kD), periplakin (190 kD) and α-2-macroglobulin-like-1 (170 kD) | |
| DIAGNOSIS | PNP | Exclusion of PNP |
Abbreviations: PNP Paraneoplastic pemphigus; DIF Direct immunofluorescence; IIF Indirect immunofluorescence; AAB Autoantibodies; PV Pemphigus vulgaris; PF Pemphigus foliaceus; IgAP IgA pemphigus.
Differential diagnosis.
| Differential Diagnosis |
|---|
| Pemphigus vulgaris |