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Psoriatic Alopecia in a Patient With Crohn Disease: An Uncommon Manifestation of Tumor Necrosis Factor α Inhibitors. | LitMetric

Psoriatic Alopecia in a Patient With Crohn Disease: An Uncommon Manifestation of Tumor Necrosis Factor α Inhibitors.

Cutis

University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine, San Juan. Drs. Carrasquillo, Barrera-Llaurador, Colón-Fontanez, and Martín-García are from the Department of Dermatology, and Dr. Pabón-Cartagena is from the Transitional Year Program.

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • * A case study discusses a 12-year-old girl who developed an uncommon side effect—alopecic crusted plaques on her scalp—after increasing her dose of adalimumab for Crohn's disease.
  • * A review of existing literature identified 24 similar cases of psoriatic alopecia related to TNF-α inhibitors, with only 6 found in the pediatric population.

Article Abstract

Tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) inhibitors are used to treat multiple inflammatory diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, and psoriasis, among others. This family of medications can cause various side effects, some as common as injection-site reactions and others as rare as the paradoxical induction of psoriasiform skin lesions. Alopecic plaques recently have been described as an uncommon adverse effect of the TNF-α inhibitors adalimumab and infliximab. We present the case of a 12-year-old girl treated with adalimumab for Crohn disease who developed an alopecic crusted plaque on the scalp 6 months after increasing the dose of the medication. Biopsies, special stains, and sterile cultures yielded a diagnosis of psoriatic alopecia secondary to TNF-α inhibitor. A literature review for similar cases found 24 additional patients presenting with similar findings, of which only 6 were part of the pediatric population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.12788/cutis.0256DOI Listing

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