We report on a case of primary cutaneous adenoid cystic carcinoma with local recurrence and lymph node metastasis. The patient was a 52-year-old Japanese woman. The initial cutaneous lesion was a skin-colored, centrally elevated, thumb-sized nodule with hair loss on the scalp in the right side of the parietal region. Three and half years after the initial combined treatment consisting of surgery and irradiation, a recurrent nodule on the left side of the parietal region of the scalp and a lymph node metastasis with perinodal tissue involvement in the left retroauricular area were discovered. In the literature on primary cutaneous adenoid cystic carcinoma, the average age in the 37 cases reported, including the present case, is 58.1 years, and 23 of the patients are women. Thirty-two percent of the carcinomas (12 cases) occur on the scalp and 16% (6 cases) on the breast. The average size of the tumors in the 24 documented cases is 3.2 cm. The local recurrence rate is 51% (19 cases). Distant metastasis to the lungs and pleura are recorded in three cases. Lymph node metastasis is recorded only in two cases including the present case. Multiple modalities including surgery, irradiation, and chemotherapy should be used for this locally aggressive and potentially metastasizing carcinoma.
We report scattered indurated erythematous lesions that presented in an 18-year-old Japanese man with Kikuchi's disease (KD; histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis). A skin biopsy showed a proliferation of histiocytes and abundant nuclear debris without the presence of neutrophils, which is characteristic of KD. The specific dermatological and pathological details of KD have been yet to be fully described. In order to assess the typical skin features of KD better, we have reviewed all the previously well-documented reports of such lesions. As the clinical and histopathological cutaneous findings in KD are so heterogeneous, it is important that scattered indurated erythematous lesions should be included as one of the possible cutaneous manifestations of this disease.
Japanese and Korean patients with EBS showed very similar phenotype and genotype correlations with patients from Western countries. Whether the higher proportion of KRT5 mutations is a definite characteristic of Japanese and Korean patients with EBS or not, requires further research into mutations in Japanese and Korean people.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.