| Literature DB >> 36003890 |
Rochelle Tonkin1, Malika Ladha2,3, Nicole Johnson4, William F Astle5, Ami Britton6, Neil H Shear2,3, Luis Murguía-Favela7, Michele Ramien1,8.
Abstract
Reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption is a recently distinguished mucosal-predominant blistering eruption triggered by respiratory infections. We describe a previously healthy 11-year-old Black female with rapidly progressive mucocutaneous blistering after prodromal respiratory infection symptoms. Reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption was suspected and treated with systemic corticosteroids followed by etanercept. Twenty-four hours after etanercept, the diagnosis of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children was raised and intravenous immunoglobulin was given. Rapidly worsening mucocutaneous disease ensued but was controlled by a second dose of etanercept. Our case highlights the following: (1) the novel observation of possible interaction/neutralization of etanercept by intravenous immunoglobulin, (2) the challenging differential diagnosis of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children for reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption patients in the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, and (3) the role of early treatment to prevent dyspigmentation.Entities:
Keywords: Coronavirus disease 2019; Etanercept; intravenous immunoglobulin; mycoplasma-induced rash and mucositis; reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption
Year: 2022 PMID: 36003890 PMCID: PMC9393491 DOI: 10.1177/2050313X221117887
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med Case Rep ISSN: 2050-313X
Figure 1.(a and b) Facial and truncal blistering, and hemorrhagic oral mucositis at initial presentation (20% BSA involvement).
Figure 2.(a–d) Progression of tense cutaneous blisters and hemorrhagic oral mucositis 24 h post-IVIG on day 4 (35% BSA involvement), prior to which she had received methylprednisolone and one dose of ETN.
Figure 3.Resolution of tense blisters, drying of erosions, and halted progression after receiving the second dose of ETN subsequent to IVIG administration given 48 h prior. (a) Facial blistering with erosions and hemorrhagic oral mucositis 24 h after the second dose of ETN on day 6. (b–d) Hemorrhagic oral mucositis and diffuse vesicles and bullae on the trunk with skin sloughing 48 h after the second dose of ETN on day 7.
Akabutu’s compounded mouthwash (developed by Dr John Akabutu, Pediatric Oncologist in Edmonton, Alberta, for mucositis symptom relief. )
| Ingredients |
|---|
| Nystatin 100,000 units/mL × 42 mL |
| Directions for use |
| Swish/gargle 15–30 mL in mouth/throat for 1 min, and then spit out excess. Repeat every 4–6 h as needed. Avoid eating or drinking for approximately 30 min after use. |
Figure 4.Follow-up post-discharge 3 weeks after receiving second dose of ETN. (a and b) There is almost complete resolution of mucocutaneous lesions with only mild desquamation of vermillion lip remains. (c and d) Re-epithelialization has occurred in areas of previous blisters/erosions with minimal dyspigmentation.
Mucocutaneous morphology of RIME.
| Lesion type | Clinical findings |
|---|---|
| Mucosal[ | • Oral: erosions, ulcers, vesiculobullae, denudation, and hemorrhagic crusting |
| Cutaneous | • Pleomorphic skin lesions tend to be targetoid vesiculobullae
|
RIME: reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption.
RIME and MIS-C diagnostic criteria.
| RIME
| MIS-C
|
|---|---|
| • Evidence of an infectious trigger based on symptoms, imaging studies or lab tests; AND | • An individual aged <21 years presenting with fever
|
RIME: reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption; MIS-C, multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.
Fever ⩾38.0°C for ⩾24 h, or report of subjective fever lasting ⩾24 h.
Including, but not limited to, one or more of the following: an elevated C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, fibrinogen, procalcitonin, D-dimer, ferritin, lactic acid dehydrogenase, or interleukin-6, elevated neutrophils, reduced lymphocytes, and low albumin.
Current reported immunomodulatory therapies for early and severe RIME.
| Class | Drug |
|---|---|
| Immunomodulatory | • Systemic corticosteroids (early high-dose): |
Source: Adapted from Ramien et al.
IVIG: intravenous immunoglobulin; RIME: reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption; TNF: tumour necrosis factor.
Randomized control trials of etanercept dosing schedules used in treatment of RIME and related skin conditions.
| Reference | Condition treated | Dosing |
|---|---|---|
| Eliades et al.
| SJS-TEN | 0.8 mg/kg or 50 mg SC × 1–2 doses based on progression |
| Miller et al.
| RIME | 0.6–0.8 mg/kg per dose for patient <60 kg or 50 mg for ⩾60 kg SC × 1 dose; second dose considered if worsening at 48 h |
| Wang et al.
| Drug-induced epidermal necrolysis | 25 mg for patients <65 kg and 50 mg for those ⩾65 kg SC twice per week until improvement |
RIME: reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption; SJS-TEN: Steven–Johnson syndrome-toxic epidermal necrolysis; SC: subcutaneous.