We report a case of IgG/IgA pemphigus presenting as pemphigus foliaceus following diagnosis and treatment of classic IgG‐mediated pemphigus vulgaris. The dual presentation of IgG and IgA positivity on direct immunofluorescence (DIF) constitutes a rare form of pemphigus with a wide variety of clinicopathologic manifestations. The progression of pemphigus vulgaris is commonly because of epitope spreading. However, the patient's disease was partially refractory to rituximab and showed a change in the DIF with dual staining for IgG and IgA. This indicates that class‐switching may have occurred with epitope spreading or that there was autoreactive IgA at the onset of disease below the threshold of detection by DIF. Our case indicates that in progressive autoimmune disease refractory to treatment, re‐evaluation of the patient for antibody isotypes absent on initial diagnosis may offer key information in better identifying the cause of progression as well as in directing the necessary treatment.
Cutaneous involvement by leukemia, or leukemia cutis, is a rare manifestation of leukemic disorders, most frequently occurring in children. The skin findings, which usually include multiple violaceous or erythematous nodules on the face, most often follow the classic presenting signs and symptoms of leukemia and occur in patients with an established primary diagnosis. Patients with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and associated leukemia cutis typically present with a solitary firm red to bluish nodule, often with an accompanying mediastinal mass, that can produce respiratory symptoms. In this article, we report a case of a patient with primary T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma presenting with a diffuse exanthem mimicking a viral illness with an associated SET-NUP214 translocation.
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