| Literature DB >> 32190818 |
Nils Schubert1, Tillmann Schill2, Marlene Plüß1, Peter Korsten1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rheumatoid arthritis is the most common type of inflammatory arthritis affecting about 1% of the population. With the advent of disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs the disease can be well controlled in many cases. Patients, however, are prone to developing infectious complications. In rare cases, these can mimic a flare of the underlying itself. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Atypical mycobacteria; Immunosuppressive agents; Mycobacterium marinum; Rheumatoid arthritis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32190818 PMCID: PMC7074991 DOI: 10.1186/s41927-020-0114-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Rheumatol ISSN: 2520-1026
Fig. 1Clinical images of the patient (a) Reddish-purplish discoloration on the back of the distal and intermediate phalanges of the third and fourth finger as well as the third and fourth metacarpophalangeal joint. On the base of the erythema, there are several formed papules and nodules with a central golden scab. b Reddish-purplish nodule on the proximal forearm
Fig. 2Ultrasound images of the third metacarpophalangeal joint. a Longitudinal view of the third metacarpophalangeal joint showing intense power doppler signaling III°. b Longitudinal view of the carpal bones demonstrating tenosynovitis of the fourth extensor tendon sheath with power doppler signaling III°
Fig. 3Flow chart of identified articles
Detailed review of published cases
| First author, year | Timing of onset of infection | Clinical symptoms | Immunosuppressive agents used | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Böcher, 2002 | Not described | livid nodules on hands, forearms, and feet, necrotizing skin ulcers, tendon rupture; fever | MTX | CPF, ETA, CLM | Clinical remission |
| Chopra, 2003 | 2 years after RA-diagnosis | wrist swelling of the right hand | ETN | CLM | Clinical remission |
| Roddy, 2008 | 5 years after RA-diagnosis | erythematous macules and papules. Following progression to pustules and fluctuant nodules, which both hands and arms | MTX | CPF, CLM,, DXC | still recovering |
| Hess, 2009 | Not described | right fourth digit was swollen and associated with fissuring and crusting; subcutaneous nodules on dorsal hand and forearm | MTX, SSZ, INF | AZM, ETA, TMT | improvement but still significant functional impairment of the finger |
| Danko, 2009 | 15 years after RA-diagnosis | erythematous nodules on upper thighs and lower lip | MTX, INF | RAP, INH, PZA, ETA | No new lesions |
| Caron, 2011 | Treatment over the previous 18 months | Inflammatory lesion on her right index and nodules on the ipsilateral forearm | ADA | CLM, MC | Clinical remission |
| Bakker, 2913 | Not described | Erythematous livid papules and necrotic nodules on right hand and both legs | MTX, ADA | ETA, CLM | Clinical remission |
| Papathemell, 2016 | Not described | subcutaneous nodules on her legs | LEF, AZA | ETA, CLM, RAP | Stabilization of the disease |
ADA adalimumab, AZA azathioprine, AZM azithromycine, CPF ciprofloxacine, CLM clarithromycine, DXC doxycycline, ETA ethambutol, ETN etanercept, INF infliximab, INH isoniazid, LEF leflunomide, MTX methotrexate, MC minocycline, PZA pyrazinamide, RFB rifabutin, RAP rifampicine, SSZ sulfasalazine, TMT trimethaprim
Fig. 4Overview of published cases in relation to treatment with conventional or biological disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs. ADA, adalimumab; AZA, azathioprine; b, biological; cs, conventional synthetic; DMARD, disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug; ETN, etanercept; INF, infliximab; LEF, leflunomide, MTX, methotrexate, SSZ, sulfasalazine
Characteristics differentiating Mycobacterium marinum infection from rheumatoid arthritis flare
| Favoring MM infection | Favoring RA flare | |
|---|---|---|
| Arthritis | Rare | Frequent |
| Tenosynovitis | Rare | Frequent |
| Skin findings | Typical swimmer’s granuloma with reddish-purplish discolouration | Rare presence of rheumatoid vasculitis or pyoderma gangraenosum |
| Laboratory findings | Elevated inflammatory markers (White blood count, C-reactive protein) | Leukocytosis rare C-reactive protein in severe flares |
| Response to glucocorticoid therapy | No improvement | Usually improves |
MM Mycobacterium marinum, RA rheumatoid arthritis