Docetaxel-induced skin reactions include hypersensitivity, edema, skin toxicity with erythrodysesthesia syndrome, infusion site reactions, alopecia, nail onycholysis, nail pigmentation, photosensitivity, scleroderma, and others, for example, stomatitis and paresthesias. However, of all reported effects, the acral erythrodysesthesia syndrome has only rarely been described in the literature. We report on two female patients with breast cancer who on treatment with docetaxel developed acral erythrodysesthesia syndrome. It presented as bizarrely shaped, burning skin reactions at their hands and feet. Histology of skin biopsies revealed microscopic damages to the eccrine sweat glands in both patients. Skin patch testing with docetaxel was negative. None of the reports dealing with side effects of docetaxel chemotherapy has described acral erythrodysesthesia syndrome with the histologic features of syringo-squamous metaplasia and eccrine neutrophilic hidradenitis. We propose here that these characteristic histologic features are essential in the differentiation from fixed drug eruption and localized graft-versus-host disease.
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare, aggressive neuroendocrine tumor of the skin with a high potential of locoregional relapse after surgery alone. This report is an update of our experience in the treatment of MCC. From January 1990 to May 2000, 31 patients with MCC, 13 men and 18 women aged between 34 and 92 years, were treated at the University of Cologne, Germany. Primary tumor sites were in the head and neck region in 13 patients, limbs in 13, and trunk in 5. The tumors were stage I in 26 of 31 patients, stage II in 4 of 31 and stage III in 1 of 31. Treatment included surgery alone in 14 of 31 patients, adjuvant postoperative radiotherapy in 16 of 31 patients, 1 of them had incomplete surgery, and definitive radiotherapy in 1 of 31 patients (stage III). Median overall survival (OS) after first diagnosis was 32 months (95% confidence interval: 0-75 months) with a 3-year OS rate of 47% (95% CI: 25-69%). Six of 31 patients relapsed locally after a median of 4 months, 10 of 31 patients developed regional node metastases, and 7 of 31 patients distant metastases. Nine patients died as a direct result of MCC. Locoregional control and disease-free survival were significantly improved in the group with postoperative radiotherapy (p = 0.023). Uni- and multivariate analysis revealed that head and neck location of the tumor and the lack of postoperative radiotherapy are unfavorable prognostic factors. Postoperative radiotherapy to the primary tumor region and the regional lymphatics is effective in the prevention of locoregional recurrence. Prospective clinical trials should be performed to confirm these observations.
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