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1.
Cancers (Basel) ; 16(12)2024 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38927977

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Melanoma is the cancer with the highest risk of dissemination to the central nervous system (CNS), one of the leading causes of mortality from this cancer. OBJECTIVE: To identify patients at higher risk of developing CNS metastases and to evaluate associated prognostic factors. METHODS: A cohort study (1998-2023) assessed patients who developed CNS melanoma metastases. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify predictive factors at melanoma diagnosis for CNS metastasis. Cox regression analysis evaluated the CNS-independent metastasis-related variables impacting survival. RESULTS: Out of 4718 patients, 380 (8.05%) developed CNS metastases. Multivariate logistic regression showed that a higher Breslow index, mitotic rate ≥ 1 mm2, ulceration, and microscopic satellitosis were significant risk factors for CNS metastasis development. Higher patient age and the location of the primary tumor in the upper or lower extremities were protective factors. In survival analysis, post-CNS metastasis, symptomatic disease, prior non-CNS metastases, CNS debut with multiple metastases, elevated LDH levels, and leptomeningeal involvement correlated with poorer survival. CONCLUSION: Predictive factors in the primary tumor independently associated with brain metastases include microscopic satellitosis, ulceration, higher Breslow index, and trunk location. Prognostic factors for lower survival in CNS disease include symptomatic disease, multiple CNS metastases, and previous metastases from different sites.

3.
J Pediatr Adolesc Gynecol ; 35(2): 171-173, 2022 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34740758

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Autoimmune bullous diseases in childhood are a diagnostic challenge. CASE: We present the case of an 11-year-old girl with recurrent vulvar erosions since early childhood. She had been referred to a child abuse unit under the suspicion of sexual abuse. She responded well to dapsone and topical corticosteroids. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION: Our review focuses on previously reported cases of pemphigoid (bullous or mucous membrane) in childhood with exclusively genital involvement. We also summarize mucous membrane pemphigoid cases diagnosed during childhood. There seems to be a differentiated form of pemphigoid predominantly affecting girls with exclusively vulvar involvement and with good prognosis. Dermatologic evaluation and a skin biopsy with direct immunofluorescence are key to diagnosing a mucous membrane pemphigoid. Further antigenic studies are needed to nosologically classify the disease properly.


Subject(s)
Pemphigoid, Benign Mucous Membrane , Pemphigoid, Bullous , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Glucocorticoids , Humans , Mucous Membrane , Pemphigoid, Benign Mucous Membrane/diagnosis , Pemphigoid, Benign Mucous Membrane/drug therapy , Pemphigoid, Benign Mucous Membrane/pathology , Pemphigoid, Bullous/diagnosis , Pemphigoid, Bullous/pathology , Vulva/pathology
8.
J Clin Med ; 9(10)2020 Oct 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33053817

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Data on the clinical patterns and histopathology of SARS-CoV-2 related skin lesions, as well as on their relationship with the severity of COVID-19 are limited. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Retrospective analysis of a prospectively collected cohort of patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection in a teaching hospital in Barcelona, Spain, from 1 April to 1 May 2020. Clinical, microbiological and therapeutic characteristics, clinicopathological patterns of skin lesions, and direct immunofluorescence and immunohistochemical findings in skin biopsies were analyzed. RESULTS: Fifty-eight out of the 2761 patients (2.1%) either consulting to the emergency room or admitted to the hospital for COVID-19 suspicion during the study period presented COVID-19 related skin lesions. Cutaneous lesions could be categorized into six patterns represented by the acronym "GROUCH": Generalized maculo-papular (20.7%), Grover's disease and other papulo-vesicular eruptions (13.8%), livedo Reticularis (6.9%), Other eruptions (22.4%), Urticarial (6.9%), and CHilblain-like (29.3%). Skin biopsies were performed in 72.4%, including direct immunofluorescence in 71.4% and immunohistochemistry in 28.6%. Patients with chilblain-like lesions exhibited a characteristic histology and were significantly younger and presented lower rates of systemic symptoms, radiological lung infiltrates and analytical abnormalities, and hospital and ICU admission compared to the rest of patients. CONCLUSION: Cutaneous lesions in patients with COVID-19 appear to be relatively rare and varied. Patients with chilblain-like lesions have a characteristic clinicopathological pattern and a less severe presentation of COVID-19.

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