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      Spiky Skin in a Renal Transplant Recipient

      1 , 2 , 1
      JAMA Dermatology
      American Medical Association (AMA)

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          Viral-associated trichodysplasia: characterization of a novel polyomavirus infection with therapeutic insights.

          Viral-associated trichodysplasia of immunosuppression is a rare cutaneous eruption that is characterized by follicularly based shiny papules and alopecia with characteristic histopathologic findings of abnormally anagen follicules with excessive inner root sheath differentiation. Prior reports have described the histopathologic characteristics on vertical sections; however, to our knowledge, immunohistochemical analysis of polyomavirus proteins has not been previously performed. We discuss the thorough diagnostic evaluation and therapy of an unusual case of viral-associated trichodysplasia due to a newly described human polyomavirus that occurred in a patient with posttreatment chronic lymphocytic leukemia and an abnormal white blood cell count. Unique to our study is the immunohistochemical staining for the polyomavirus middle T antigen, which demonstrated positive staining of cellular inclusions within keratinocytes that compose the inner root sheath. Further evaluation with scanning electron microscopy and polymerase chain reaction analysis of viral DNA confirmed the presence of the virus. Treatment with topical cidofovir resulted in dramatic clinical improvement and hair regrowth. Several tools, including immunohistochemical staining for the polyomavirus middle T antigen, can be used to identify the pathogenic virus associated with viral-associated trichodysplasia. This case highlights the utility of multiple diagnostic modalities and a robust response to a topical therapeutic agent, cidofovir.
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            Viral-associated trichodysplasia of immunosuppression: report of a pediatric patient with response to oral valganciclovir.

            Viral-associated trichodysplasia of immunosuppression is an increasingly recognized entity characterized by follicular-based papules, primarily in the central part of the face, that produce variable degrees of alopecia and dysmorphic features. It has been primarily described in transplant recipients but has recently been recognized in patients receiving chemotherapy for leukemia and lymphoma. It is associated with distinctive histologic features such as dilated anagen hair follicles, absent hair papillae, and abrupt cornification of the inner root sheath. A 5-year-old boy presented with spiny follicular papules that caused thickening of the skin of the face 1 year after cardiac transplantation. He had been exposed to several immunosuppressive agents, including mycophenolate mofetil, tacrolimus, intravenous immunoglobulin, rituximab, cylcophosphamide, and prednisone. Despite the failure of multiple topical treatments, our patient's eruption improved with systemic valganciclovir therapy. We describe the youngest patient (to our knowledge) with viral-associated trichodysplasia of immunosuppression and discuss the characteristic clinicopathologic features. Our report supports the theory that immunosuppression is the predisposing factor to a folliculotropic papovavirus that alters follicular maturation.
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              Viral-associated trichodysplasia secondary to antineoplastic treatment in a patient with lymphoblastic leukemia.

              Viral-associated trichodysplasia spinulosa is an unusual condition with distinctive clinical and histopathological features. Initially described in patients immunosupressed as a result of solid organ transplantation, it has also been reported in patients treated with immunosuppressive drugs other than cyclosporine or being treated for hematological malignancies. Patients presented with disseminated follicular, hyperkeratotic papules, and variable degrees of alopecia. Histopathological examination revealed shaftless bulbous and dilated hair follicles with keratotic plugging of the infundibulum. The authors reported a case of viral-associated trichodysplasia in a 5-year-old boy treated for a lymphoblastic leukemia. Eruption persisted, although treated with emollients and keratolytics, but resolved spontaneously after completing the antineoplastic medication.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JAMA Dermatology
                JAMA Dermatol
                American Medical Association (AMA)
                2168-6068
                November 01 2018
                November 01 2018
                : 154
                : 11
                : 1342
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Dermatology, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom
                [2 ]Department of Cellular Pathology, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom
                Article
                10.1001/jamadermatol.2018.1267
                15ccbf97-9d46-4626-88a8-777a8006847f
                © 2018
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