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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0278883 (
metastatic melanoma
)
6,224
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recently, a number of medications approved for nondermatologic use have proved useful against dermatologic diseases. This article reviews the dermatologic uses and effects of deferasirox, bortezomib, dasatinib, and cyclosporine eye drops. Deferasirox--an oral iron chelator--could be an effective treatment against porphyria cutanea tarda, hemochromatosis, and pathogens such as mucor that thrive in iron rich environments. Bortezomib, a proteasome inhibitor and multiple myeloma treatment, may be effective against nodular amyloid and has been effectively used against squamous cell carcinoma; although trials demonstrate it is ineffective against
metastatic melanoma
. Bortezomib has many cutaneous side effects including erythematous plaques or nodules, a generalized morbilliform erythema with ulcerations and fever, purpuric eruptions, leukocytoclastic vasculitis,
Sweet's syndrome
, and folliculitis. Dasatinib is a multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor active in vitro against most cell lines containing BCR-ABL mutations that confer resistance to imatinib. Dasatinib is likely to be effective against dermatofibroma sarcoma protuberans and cutaneous acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and has caused panniculitis. Cyclosporine 0.05% ocular emulsion (eye drops) are approved to treat dry eyes including dry eyes caused by collagen vascular disease. Cyclosporine eye drops might also have utility in treating eye pathology of ocular rosacea, atopic keratoconjunctivitis, graft versus host disease, herpes keratitis, chronic sarcoidosis of the conjunctiva, conjunctival manifestations of actinic prurigo, keratitis of keratitis-ichthyosis deafness (KID) syndrome, and lichen planus-related kerato-conjunctivitis. This article speculates that cyclosporine eye drops would also be useful for any disease causing ectropion or eclabion of the eye as well as toxic epidermal necrolysis-related eye pathology (in particular corneal scarring).
...
PMID:A review of deferasirox, bortezomib, dasatinib, and cyclosporine eye drops: possible uses and known side effects in cutaneous medicine. 1737 1
Sweet's syndrome
, a neutrophilic dermatosis, is a known paraneoplastic complication occurring with various malignancies. It has been infrequently reported in association with melanoma. Ipilimumab is an antibody against an inhibitory cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 receptor on T cells. It is associated with a range of immune-related toxicities.
Sweet's syndrome
in association with ipilimumab has been reported only briefly in the literature. However, neutrophilic infiltration has been seen in biopsies of patients with ipilimumab-associated enterocolitis. We report, in detail, the case of a woman with
metastatic melanoma
undergoing ipilimumab therapy. After the second cycle of immunotherapy, the patient presented with high-grade fever followed by a rash on her hands. No infectious etiology was elucidated after an extensive workup. Pathologic examination of the skin biopsy from the hands confirmed neutrophilic dermatosis. The patient was treated with systemic steroids achieving complete remission of the skin lesions. Physicians should be aware of
Sweet's syndrome
as a possible cutaneous side effect of ipilimumab therapy and be familiar with its management.
...
PMID:Sweet's syndrome in a patient with metastatic melanoma after ipilimumab therapy. 2411 62
Neutrophilic panniculitis is an infrequent but characteristic adverse event under therapy with BRAF inhibitors (BRAFi). Since the approval of vemurafenib for treatment of
metastatic melanoma
in 2011, only two cases of neutrophilic panniculitis in malignancies other than melanoma have been published. Histiocytoid infiltrates of immature neutrophils resembling histiocytes or myelocytes have been reported in
Sweet's syndrome
and rarely in other neutrophilic dermatoses. We describe a novel variant of neutrophilic panniculitis with histiocytoid myeloid cells in an early lesion from a patient treated with vemurafenib in combination with an anti-EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) agent for metastatic colon carcinoma, three weeks after initiation of therapy. Recognizing this variant of panniculitis associated to BRAFi can avoid misinterpretation of the atypical subcutaneous infiltrate as myeloid leukaemia cutis.
...
PMID:Vemurafenib-induced histiocytoid neutrophilic panniculitis simulating myeloid leukaemia cutis. 3042 27