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Skin - nontumor

Blistering disorders

Transient acantholytic dermatosis

 

Author: Nat Pernick, M.D, PathologyOutlines.com, Inc.

Revised: 1 November 2009

Last major update: November 2009

Copyright: (c) 2002-2009, PathologyOutlines.com, Inc.

 

Definition

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● Transient edematous papules and vesicles on chest and back, possibly due to heat and sweating

● Initially characterized by Grover in 1970 (Arch Dermatol 1970;101:426)

 

Terminology

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● Also called Grover's or Grover disease

● Proposed term is persistent and recurrent acantholytic dermatosis, since often is not transient (Hautarzt 2000;51:244)

 

Epidemiology

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● Incidence of 0.1%

● 70% male, mean age 61 years

 

Sites

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● Usually begins on anterior chest, upper back or lower chest

● May become disseminated, but scalp, palms and soles are spared

 

Etiology

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● Unknown

● Often associated with heat, sweating or sunlight exposure (Mayo Clin Proc 1999;74:229, Dermatology 1999;198:410), although many patients present in winter (J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;55:263)

● Associated with atopic dermatitis or asteatotic eczema

 

Clinical features

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● Benign, but often persistent and difficult to manage

● High index of suspicion needed to make the diagnosis

● All patients have some pruritis, may be severe; amount of itching does not correlate with amount of lesions

● Lesions are red-brown, discrete papules that usually do not coalesce

● 8% have coexisting hematologic malignancies (J Clin Oncol 1994;12:1703)

● No systemic symptoms

 

Prognostic factors

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● Most cases resolve within months, but often persists for years

 

Case reports

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● 14 year old girl with bullous variant (Eur J Dermatol 2005;15:288)

● 60 year old man with pruritic eruption on his back and chest (American Family Physician 2006)

● 71 year old man with disease induced by cetuximab (anti-EGFR) for colon cancer (Dermatology 2006;213:37)

 

Treatment

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● Topical corticosteroids for inflammation and itching

● Menthol or pramoxine lotions for itching

● Retinoids (Vitamin A, 50,000 Units 3/day x 2 weeks, then daily x 12 weeks, OR isotretinoid 40 mg/day x 2-12 weeks

● For severely resistant cases, oral corticosteroids, UV-B, PUVA, methotrexate or grenz radiation may be effective (eMedicine)

● Possibly triple antibiotics (Cutis 2007;80:72)

● Avoid excess heat or sweating

 

Clinical images

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                                                                                                Various images                  Bullous variant

 

Micro description (Histopathology)

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● Spongiosis and focal acantholysis

● Usually superficial dermal, perivascular infiltrate of lymphocytes and histiocytes; eosinophils in 25%

● May have other coexisting dermatologic disorders (Arch Pathol Lab Med 2009;133:1490)

 

Patterns:

● Pemphigus vulgaris–like (47%): predominantly limited to suprabasal acantholysis, with basal keratinocytes attached to basement membrane forming a characteristic tombstone appearance

● Darier-like (18%): suprabasal acantholysis of keratinocytes with scattered apoptotic or dyskeratotic cells within various levels of the epidermis

● Spongiotic (9%): edema within epidermis, causing separation of keratinocytes and prominent intracellular bridges

● Pemphigus foliaceous–like (9%)

● Mixed (9%)

● Hailey-Hailey–like (8%): suprabasal acantholysis of all levels of the epidermis without significant dyskeratosis (“dilapidated brick wall” appearance)

 

Micro images

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Acantholytic cells within                  Prominent acantholysis;                  Chronic lesion resembles

suprabasal clefts                               resembles Hailey-Hailey                   solar keratosis

                                                                disease

 

 

                                                                               

Acantholytic dyskeratosis               With corps ronds                               Pemphigus vulgaris–like pattern

in epidermis                                         and grains                                            of suprabasal acantholysis

 

 

                                                               

Various images                                  Spongiosis                                           Spongiotic-like pattern

 

Negative  stains

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● No specific pattern for direct immunofluorescence

 

Differential diagnosis (pathology)

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● Darier’s disease: virtually identical; greater tendency to involve follicles; no eosinophilic infiltrate; clinical correlation essential

● Pemphigus vulgaris: broad zones of suprabasilar acantholysis; mucosal involvement; involvement of adnexal structures; often abundant eosinophils; fishnet pattern of IgG and C3 on direct immunofluoresence

● Pemphigus foliaceus: broad zone of subcorneal and subgranular acantholysis; involvement of adnexal structures; often eosinophils; fishnet pattern of IgG and C3 on direct immunofluoresence

● Primary spongiotic dermatitis: involvement of entire epidermis; psoriasiform hyperplasia

 

Differential diagnosis (clinical)

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● Dermatitis herpetiformis: severe pruritis, vesicles on extensor surface

Drug eruption: morbilliform papules on face, trunk, and extremities

Folliculitis: erythematous papules on trunk, head, and neck

● Galli-Galli disease (acantholytic variant of Dowling-Degos disease): presents in similar manner, but has a focal reticulated pattern, affects hands, groin and lower extremities; histology shows elongation of rete ridges but no acantholysis (J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:299)

● Parasites: examine scraping under microscope for organisms

 

End of Skin - nontumor > Transient acantholytic dermatosis

 

 

 

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