HLA-DRB1,-DQA1, and -DQB1 genomic typing of 50 patients with dermatitis herpetiformis and of 290 healthy blood donors was performed. Genes encoding the DQ (alpha 1*0501, beta 1*02) heterodimer were carried by 43 (86%) of the patients and 72 (25%) of the controls. Of the remaining seven patients six (12% of all the patients) carried genes encoding the DQ (alpha 1*03, beta 1*0302) heterodimer. These HLA associations are very similar to those observed in patients with celiac disease. We thus conclude that dermatitis herpetiformis and celiac disease are associated to the very same HLA-DQ alpha beta heterodimers.
Background: Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is an inflammatory skin disease with a chronic intermittent course. HS is difficult to treat, and the evidence for the effect of most treatments consists of smaller open studies. The use of dapsone in the treatment of HS is based on a few published cases successfully treated. Objective: To evaluate the potential of dapsone treatment for HS in an open case series. Methods: An exploratory and retrospective review of case notes from HS patients treated with dapsone was performed. Patients were included irrespective of treatment outcome. Prior to the treatment the level of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in the blood was tested for all patients. Results: A total of 24 HS patients were included and treated with dapsone. Improvement was seen in 9 out of 24 (38%) treated patients, whereas 15 out of 24 (62%) did not experience any improvement. None of the 4 cases with severe disease experienced improvement. Side effects leading to discontinuation of the treatment occurred in 2 of 24 patients (8%). Recurrence of disease at the cessation of treatment was described as rapid. Limitations: The study is limited by lacking a control group. Conclusion: Therapy with dapsone for patients with HS is possible, particularly in milder cases. The effect may be due to either antibacterial or anti-inflammatory effects of the drug, or both. Rapid recurrence after stopping treatment however suggests that anti-inflammatory effects may predominate. The effect appears to be smaller than that reported with combination therapy using clindamycin and rifampicin. To clarify the true effect of dapsone future randomized controlled trials are necessary.
We report the results of a re-examination of a series of 57 biopsies from 50 patients with the clinical diagnosis of hidradenitis suppurativa, submitted to the Department of Pathology at the University Hospital of Northern Norway, Tromsø, Norway. The biopsy material came from hospitals and physicians all over northern Norway in the years 2000-2007. All tissue material was resectioned and stained with the immunohistochemical reagent, cytokeratin (AE1/AE3/PKC26), and that made it possible to divide the material into two different disease categories: (1) 36 biopsies from 30 cases had tissue inflammation after rupture of keratin-rich epidermal cysts, which we call 'horny cell inflammation', followed by extensive cutaneous thrombi and infarcts, and (2) 21 biopsies from 20 cases had 'apocrinitis' defined here as an inflammatory destruction of apocrine skin glands, and partly of close eccrine glands. The two disease populations differed: the patients with a diagnosis of horny cell inflammation were younger and mainly women; those with a diagnosis of apocrinitis, as defined here, were older, men and women equally represented.
Background Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) substantially affects health‐related quality‐of‐life outcomes. Most treatment options are supported by low quality of evidence without validated outcomes. Objective The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of surgical and medical interventions using physician‐ and patient‐reported outcomes registered in HISREG. Methods Data were extracted for all adult patients registered in HISREG between January 2013 and April 2016. Primary endpoints included Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) scores, pain as measured using a numeric rating scale (NRS), Sartorius score and Hurley classification. Minimum clinically important differences (MCIDs) for DLQI and NRS pain were analysed. Secondary endpoints included comparisons among different treatment groups, safety and complications of various treatments. Results Two hundred and fifty‐five patients were included in the study: 31, 188, and 36 patients had Hurley stages I, II and III disease, respectively. Treatment with CO2 lasers was the most common treatment modality. One hundred and forty‐nine patients (58.4%) were treated with surgical intervention, 87 (34.1%) received antibiotics and/or anti‐inflammatory treatments, and 19 (7.5%) were treated with both surgery and medical intervention. No patients received biologic treatment. In patients with surgical treatments, Sartorius scores were significantly improved compared with baseline (P = 0.001), 83 patients (55%) achieved a DLQI MCID, and 75 patients (49.7%) achieved an NRS pain MCID. In patients with medical treatments, Sartorius scores were not significantly improved compared with baseline (P = 0.582); 25 patients (28%) achieved a DLQI MCID and 28 patients (31%) achieved an NRS pain MCID. In patients treated with surgical and medical combination, 9 (48%) achieved DLQI and NRS pain MCIDs and Sartorius scores were significantly improved. Conclusions CO2 laser treatment is more effective than the non‐biologic medical treatments in this analysis based on physician‐ and patient‐derived outcomes. The study provides limited evidence for the combination of medical and surgical therapies in patients with HS.
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