We describe five girls with vulval pemphigoid: two had bullous pemphigoid confined to the vulva and three had cicatricial pemphigoid. They demonstrate a spectrum of severity from localized disease to extensive vulval scarring necessitating long-term immunosuppressive therapy and surgical correction. The age at onset of their disease ranged between 6 and 13 years. All presented with vulval discomfort and erosions. Three had oral lesions, two perianal and one eye and cutaneous involvement. Two girls with only vulval lesions and one with vulval and oral lesions responded well to topical steroids. In two, systemic treatment with prednisolone and dapsone or azathioprine was required. The diagnosis was made on the basis of histology and immunofluorescence (IF). All had positive direct IF with IgG and C3. Indirect IF demonstrated circulating IgG binding to the basement membrane zone in four, with dermal or epidermal binding on salt-split skin substrate. Immunoblotting revealed antibodies to the BP230 and BP180 antigens. Immunoelectron microscopy in the child with dermal binding IgG and BP180 and BP230 on immunoblotting showed labelling at the lamina densa-lamina lucida interface adjacent to hemidesmosomes.
We report the case of a 72-year-old man with clinical features resembling those of non-lethal junctional epidermolysis bullosa associated with IgG autoantibodies to the beta chain of laminin-5. The patient presented with a sudden onset of blistering and severe fragility of the skin and mucous membranes resulting in atrophic scars. Electron microscopy showed that the blistering arose in the lamina lucida. Indirect immunofluorescence indicated that the autoantibodies bound to the dermal side of 1 mol/L NaCl-split skin, and both direct and indirect immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated antibody binding to the lamina densa. Postembedding immunogold electron microscopy also revealed labelling in the lamina lucida beneath the hemidesmosomes. On immunoblotting, we found the autoantibodies to comigrate with the beta chain of laminin-5. Following the nomenclature of inherited junctional epidermolysis bullosa with mutations of the laminin-5 gene, we propose the name acquired junctional epidermolysis bullosa for this newly recognized disease.
We report an unusual familial occurrence of autoimmune bullous diseases. Three members of a family suffered from three different autoimmune bullous diseases: pemphigus vulgaris (PV), linear IgA disease (LAD) and cicatricial pemphigoid (CP). The HLA type was determined in five family members: all were positive for HLA-DQ5/DR6, which is reported to be associated with susceptibility to PV. The CP patient was DQ7(3) positive, which is in concordance with enhanced susceptibility to ocular CP and CP. The LAD patient was B8 and DR3 negative but positive for HLA-A1. Our study supports the hypothesis that there is a genetically transmitted susceptibility to autoimmune bullous diseases but that additional factors seem necessary actually to develop a particular disease.
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