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Development of a Skin-Directed Scoring System for Stevens-Johnson Syndrome and Epidermal Necrolysis: A Delphi Consensus Exercise.

Authors :
Waters M
Dobry A
Le ST
Shinkai K
Beachkofsky TM
Davis MDP
Dominguez AR
Kroshinsky D
Markova A
Micheletti RG
Mostaghimi A
Pasieka HB
Rosenbach M
Seminario-Vidal L
Trinidad J
Albrecht J
Altman EM
Arakaki R
Ardern-Jones M
Bridges AG
Cardones AR
Chadha AA
Chen JK
Chen ST
Cheng K
Daveluy S
DeNiro KL
Harp J
Keller JJ
King B
Korman AM
Lowenstein EJ
Luxenberg E
Mancuso JB
Mauskar MM
Milam P
Motaparthi K
Nelson CA
Nguyen CV
Nutan F
Ortega-Loayza AG
Patel T
Rahnama-Moghadam S
Rekhtman S
Rojek NW
Sarihan M
Shaigany S
Sharma TR
Shearer SM
Shields BE
Strowd LC
Tartar DM
Thomas C
Wanat KA
Walls AC
Zaba LC
Ziemer CM
Maverakis E
Kaffenberger BH
Source :
JAMA dermatology [JAMA Dermatol] 2023 Jul 01; Vol. 159 (7), pp. 772-777.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Importance: Scoring systems for Stevens-Johnson syndrome and epidermal necrolysis (EN) only estimate patient prognosis and are weighted toward comorbidities and systemic features; morphologic terminology for EN lesions is inconsistent.<br />Objectives: To establish consensus among expert dermatologists on EN terminology, morphologic progression, and most-affected sites, and to build a framework for developing a skin-directed scoring system for EN.<br />Evidence Review: A Delphi consensus using the RAND/UCLA appropriateness criteria was initiated with a core group from the Society of Dermatology Hospitalists to establish agreement on the optimal design for an EN cutaneous scoring instrument, terminology, morphologic traits, and sites of involvement.<br />Findings: In round 1, the 54 participating dermatology hospitalists reached consensus on all 49 statements (30 appropriate, 3 inappropriate, 16 uncertain). In round 2, they agreed on another 15 statements (8 appropriate, 7 uncertain). There was consistent agreement on the need for a skin-specific instrument; on the most-often affected skin sites (head and neck, chest, upper back, ocular mucosa, oral mucosa); and that blanching erythema, dusky erythema, targetoid erythema, vesicles/bullae, desquamation, and erosions comprise the morphologic traits of EN and can be consistently differentiated.<br />Conclusions and Relevance: This consensus exercise confirmed the need for an EN skin-directed scoring system, nomenclature, and differentiation of specific morphologic traits, and identified the sites most affected. It also established a baseline consensus for a standardized EN instrument with consistent terminology.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2168-6084
Volume :
159
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JAMA dermatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37256599
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jamadermatol.2023.1347