BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to examine the clinical and epidemiologic features of pemphigus in eastern Sicily. METHODS: All new cases of pemphigus seen in the Dermatology Clinic at the University of Catania during the period January 1982 to June 1996 were studied retrospectively. RESULTS: Eighty-four patients with pemphigus represented 1.3% of 6653 patients admitted to our clinic in a 13.5-year period, with an average annual incidence of six cases per year. The most common form of presentation was pemphigus vulgaris (PV) (75%), followed by pemphigus erythematosus (17%), pemphigus herpetiformis (6%), and pemphigus vegetans (2%). In 6% of PV patients, the oral lesions were not followed by skin involvement, and the lag time between the onset of illness and the final diagnosis in five PV cases was prolonged, ranging from 4 to 7 years, probably due to the mild clinical presentation of the disease. Two trauma-related PV cases were documented; in one case, the blisters were located in a surgical scar and in the other in a burn scar. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings showed that pemphigus has a relatively high prevalence in eastern Sicily compared with other Italian regions; PV is the most common variant, and may have a mild course not always requiring aggressive therapy.
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to examine the clinical and epidemiologic features of pemphigus in eastern Sicily. METHODS: All new cases of pemphigus seen in the Dermatology Clinic at the University of Catania during the period January 1982 to June 1996 were studied retrospectively. RESULTS: Eighty-four patients with pemphigus represented 1.3% of 6653 patients admitted to our clinic in a 13.5-year period, with an average annual incidence of six cases per year. The most common form of presentation was pemphigus vulgaris (PV) (75%), followed by pemphigus erythematosus (17%), pemphigus herpetiformis (6%), and pemphigus vegetans (2%). In 6% of PV patients, the oral lesions were not followed by skin involvement, and the lag time between the onset of illness and the final diagnosis in five PV cases was prolonged, ranging from 4 to 7 years, probably due to the mild clinical presentation of the disease. Two trauma-related PV cases were documented; in one case, the blisters were located in a surgical scar and in the other in a burn scar. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings showed that pemphigus has a relatively high prevalence in eastern Sicily compared with other Italian regions; PV is the most common variant, and may have a mild course not always requiring aggressive therapy.
Authors: Hanan Rashid; Aniek Lamberts; Gilles F H Diercks; Hendri H Pas; Joost M Meijer; Maria C Bolling; Barbara Horváth Journal: Am J Clin Dermatol Date: 2019-12 Impact factor: 7.403
Authors: Adriana Maria Porro; Livia de Vasconcelos Nasser Caetano; Laura de Sena Nogueira Maehara; Milvia Maria dos Santos Enokihara Journal: An Bras Dermatol Date: 2014 Jan-Feb Impact factor: 1.896