1. Juvenile dermatomyositis resembling late-stage Degos disease with gastrointestinal perforations successfully treated with combination of cyclophosphamide and rituximab: case-based review.
- Author
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Day W, Gabriel C, Kelly RE Jr, Magro CM, Williams JV, Werner A, Gifford L, Lapsia SP, and Aguiar CL
- Subjects
- Child, Cyclophosphamide therapeutic use, Dermatomyositis complications, Dermatomyositis drug therapy, Diagnosis, Differential, Digestive System Surgical Procedures, Duodenal Diseases diagnosis, Duodenal Diseases therapy, Esophageal Perforation diagnosis, Esophageal Perforation therapy, Female, Humans, Intestinal Perforation etiology, Intestinal Perforation therapy, Jejunal Diseases diagnosis, Jejunal Diseases therapy, Rituximab therapeutic use, Antirheumatic Agents therapeutic use, Dermatomyositis diagnosis, Intestinal Perforation diagnosis, Malignant Atrophic Papulosis diagnosis
- Abstract
Dermatomyositis (DM) is a multi-system disease that results in chronic inflammation principally of the skin and striated muscle. Small blood vessel injury in the GI tract has been described in dermatomyositis, manifesting as bleeding, ulceration, pneumatosis intestinalis, and ultimately perforation. Recent histopathological studies have shown deposits in the capillaries of the skin, gastrointestinal tract, and brain of patients with dermatomyositis similar to that found in patients with Degos disease, suggesting these disease processes are closely related or represent varying degrees of severity on the same pathologic spectrum. We report a case of juvenile dermatomyositis (JDM) resembling late-stage Degos disease with gastrointestinal perforations successfully treated with combination rituximab and cyclophosphamide therapy. We systematically reviewed the literature detailing the medical and surgical treatments for gastrointestinal perforation in dermatomyositis, Degos-like dermatomyositis, and Degos disease. In addition to our case, as of October 2019, we identified 36 cases describing gastrointestinal perforation in patients with underlying dermatomyositis, 5 cases of Degos-like dermatomyositis and 17 cases of idiopathic Degos disease. Corticosteroid therapy was used widely for dermatomyositis and Degos-like dermatomyositis, while antiplatelet and anticoagulant medications were chiefly used for patients with idiopathic Degos disease. However, there were no cases that detailed the successful treatment of dermatomyositis or Degos disease with gastrointestinal perforation with rituximab alone or combined with cyclophosphamide. We report that rituximab, in combination with cyclophosphamide, can be used as a novel adjunctive therapy to successfully treat dermatomyositis with Degos-like gastrointestinal perforation.
- Published
- 2020
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