| Literature DB >> 35513831 |
Prajwol Shrestha1,2, Mathew K George3, Sweta Baidya3,4, Sunil K Rai3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bullous pemphigoid is an uncommon dermatologic manifestation seen in squamous cell lung cancer, and evidence guiding optimal treatment, especially in the elderly population, is limited. We report herein a case of squamous cell lung cancer diagnosed after being investigated for refractory bullous pemphigoid showing marked response to carboplatin-based chemotherapy. This is the first case report that shows carboplatin can be used as an effective alternative in treatment of malignancy-associated bullous pemphigoid. CASE REPORT: An 80-year-old caucasian man developed extensive vesiculobullous rashes on his trunk, chest, abdomen, and inguinal region associated with significant pruritus causing sleep disturbance. The diagnosis of bullous pemphigoid was confirmed on skin biopsy. The skin lesions continued to worsen even after use of oral and topical steroid in addition to oral doxycycline. Chest computed tomography revealed a spiculated left lung lesion along with mediastinal lymphadenopathy. Fine-needle aspiration from the mediastinal lymph node confirmed metastatic squamous cell lung carcinoma. Carboplatin with gemcitabine was initiated, and significant response was seen within 3 days of chemotherapy. The skin lesions continued to remain in remission even after stopping the chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Bullous pemphigoid; Carboplatin; Chemotherapy; Squamous cell lung carcinoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35513831 PMCID: PMC9074342 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-022-03323-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Pictures 1 and 2: day of admission (2 days before chemotherapy)
Fig. 2Chest CT showing left mediastinal lymphadenopathy (image A) with associated PET avid lung lesion (image B)
Fig. 3Pictures 3 and 4: day 3 post-chemotherapy
Fig. 4Pictures 5 and 6: day 14 of chemotherapy
Fig. 5Pictures 7 and 8: week 5, chemotherapy stopped
Published case reports of BP associated with lung carcinoma and treatment response
| S. no. | Publications reporting BP in lung cancer | Details | Treatment | Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rook et al. 1968 [ | 40 years with bronchial carcinoma | Surgery and high-dose corticosteroids | Partial response |
| 2 | Takeuchi et al. 1986 [ | 79-Year-old male, known lung cancer, diagnosed with BP Skin biopsy unknown | Radiotherapy | Lesions resolved during radiotherapy |
| 3 | Graham-Brown et al. 1987 [ | 74-Year-old male, bronchial carcinoma | Corticosteroid, azathioprine, surgery, and radiotherapy | Response only after surgery and radiotherapy |
| 4 | Sato et al. 1996 [ | 63-Year-old male, lung cancer BP confirmed on skin biopsy | Left upper lobectomy and mediastinal node dissection | Skin lesions resolved on postop. day 5 |
| 5 | Shigemori et al. 2001 [ | 78-Year-old man noted to have undifferentiated large cell carcinoma on autopsy | – | – |
| 6 | Janah et al. 2014 [ | 52-Year-old Bronchial CA (squamous cell carcinoma) | Two cycles of cisplatin and Navelbine with topical steroid Chest and cerebellar RT | Good response |
| 7 | Das et al. 2015 [ | 76-year-old squamous cell CA of lung | Cisplatin and gemcitabine | Good response |
| 8 | Lakhdar et al. 2014 | 44-Year-old Small cell lung CA | Chemotherapy | Good response |
| 9 | Safini et al. 2015 | 46-year-old Small cell lung CA | Cisplatin and etoposide | Regression of 75% of cutaneous lesions |