Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia is an opportunistic infection associated with substantial rates of mortality in immunosuppressed patients. Prophylaxis recommendations are mostly targeted toward patients with non-dermatologic diagnoses. This study was conducted to determine when dermatology patients treated with immunosuppressive medications should be offered P. jiroveci pneumonia prophylaxis. We searched the literature from January 1, 1993, to December 31, 2013, using terms relating to P. jiroveci pneumonia and dermatologic diagnoses to analyze the clinical characteristics of previously affected patients. Guidelines for P. jiroveci pneumonia prophylaxis from other medical fields were also analyzed. Of 17 dermatology patients reported to have contracted P. jiroveci pneumonia, eight (47.1%) died of the pneumonia. Risk factors included lack of prophylaxis, systemic corticosteroid therapy, lymphopenia, hypoalbuminemia, low serum CD4 counts, comorbid pulmonary or renal disease, malignancy, and prior organ transplantation. The present conclusions are limited by heterogeneity among the selected studies and limitations in their identification and selection. However, P. jiroveci pneumonia in dermatology patients is associated with a high mortality rate. Based on our analysis, we propose that prophylaxis be considered in dermatology patients in whom treatment with systemic corticosteroids at doses exceeding 20 mg/day or treatment with corticosteroid-sparing immunosuppressive agents is anticipated for at least 4 weeks, and in patients with additional risk factors for P. jiroveci pneumonia.
Epidermodysplasia verruciformis (EDV) is a rare genodermatosis characterized by susceptibility to human papilloma virus (HPV) infection. An acquired form of EDV has been described in the setting of immunosuppression, including in patients with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). We present the case of an HIV-positive, adopted Haitian boy who presented with EDV. Few cases of chidren with HIV and acquired EDV have been reported and are likely underrecognized.
Extramedullary plasmacytoma (EMP) of the skin is a rare indolent neoplasm that shares morphological and immunophenotypic features with plasma cell myeloma (PCM), but the molecular features that distinguish these two entities have not been defined. We reviewed the clinical characteristics, course, and molecular abnormalities in 7 cases of cutaneous EMP (cEMP); 2 patients had primary cEMP and 5 had secondary cEMP. Two patients died of progressive extramedullary plasmacytoma, 1 without PCM; 1 patient who had only a hyperdiploid clone, died within 17 months of the diagnosis of cEMP; and 3 died of PCM. One patient, who had cEMP with a hyperdiploid clone and a 13q deletion, was alive 28 months after diagnosis. Our findings raise questions about the relative prognostic value of molecular aberrations observed in cEMP and PCM. The role of fluorescence in situ hybridization testing in predicting disease progression of cEMP remains to be defined.
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