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Sweet's syndrome in a neonate with non-B54 types of human leukocyte antigen 
 
Sweet's syndrome in a neonate with non-B54 types of human leukocyte antigen
  Kentaro Omoya, Yasuhiro Naiki, Zenichiro Kato, Seiichiro Yoshioka, Yasushi Uchida, Toshiaki Taga, Yoshinori Aoki, Hideki Deguchi, Naomi Kondo
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Sweet's syndrome in a neonate with non-B54

types of human leukocyte antigen

Kentaro Omoya, Yasuhiro Naiki, Zenichiro Kato, Seiichiro Yoshioka, Yasushi Uchida, Toshiaki Taga, Yoshinori Aoki, Hideki Deguchi, Naomi Kondo

Gifu, Japan

Author Affiliations: Department of Pediatrics, Nagahama City Hospital, Nagahama, Shiga, Japan (Omoya K, Naiki Y, Yoshioka S, Uchida Y, Taga T); Department of Pediatrics, Graduate School of Medicine, Gifu University, Gifu, Japan (Omoya K, Kato Z, Kondo N); Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases (CEID), Gifu University, Japan (Kato Z, Kondo N); Center for Advanced Drug Research (CADR), Gifu University, Japan (Kato Z, Kondo N); Department of Dermatology, Nagahama City Hospital, Nagahama, Shiga, Japan (Aoki Y, Deguchi H)

Corresponding Author: Zenichiro Kato, MD, PhD, Department of Pediatrics, Graduate School of Medicine, Gifu University, Yanagido 1-1, Gifu 501-1194, Japan (Tel: +81 (58) 230 6386;  Fax: +81 (58) 230 6387; Email: zen-k@gifu-u.ac.jp)

doi: 10.1007/s12519-011-0308-2

Background: Sweet's syndrome (acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis) is characterized by fever, polymorphonuclear leukocytosis of blood, painful plaques on the limbs, face and neck, and histologically a dense dermal infiltration with mature neutrophils. Sweet's syndrome is often a complication of hematologic malignant disease or drug-induced sensitivity reactions and has a significant susceptibility correlated with certain human leukocyte antigen (HLA).

Methods: A 5-week-old Japanese girl with Sweet's syndrome confirmed by skin biopsy was successfully treated and HLA analysis was performed.

Results: The patient was one of the youngest patients reported with Sweet's syndrome, suggesting the importance of the genetic background. Although the HLA types of the patient did not have B54, which was reported as a significant susceptibility correlation, structural analysis of the patient's HLAs suggested a similar possible motif for the bound peptides.

Conclusion: Studies on the HLA bound peptides and HLA structural analysis for patients with Sweet's syndrome would be valuable for understanding the molecular mechanism of the pathogenesis.

Key words: acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis; human leukocyte antigen; infant; rectovaginal fistula; Sweet's syndrome

World J Pediatr 2012;8(2):181-184


Introduction

Sweet's syndrome (SS) (acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis) is characterized by four features: fever, polymorphonuclear leukocytosis of blood, painful plaques on the limbs, face and neck and histologically a dense dermal infiltration with mature neutrophils.[1,2] SS is often a complication of hematologic malignant disease or drug-induced sensitivity reactions and has a significant susceptibility correlated with certain human leukocyte antigens (HLA).[3,4] We describe here a case of a 5-week-old Japanese girl who suffered from SS with rectovaginal fistula, one of the youngest SS patients reported, suggesting the importance of HLA analysis in infant cases.

Case report

A 5-week-old Japanese girl, born to unrelated parents after a full-term, uneventful pregnancy, had rash with a high grade of fever for 3 days. On admission, her body temperature was 38.4ºC. The rash on her cheeks, trunk and extremities was unusual eruption that was multiple, a few millimeters to several centimeters in diameter, firm, round to irregularly shaped papules and plaques with central umbilication and hypopigmentation. Some of her skin lesions had dark bulbous centers (Fig. 1A-C).

White blood cell count was 29 500/mm3, hemoglobin level 12.4 g/dL, hematocrit 35.5%, and platelet count 349000/mm3. C-reactive protein was 2.2 mg/dL, while other laboratory test results including serum immunoglobulin concentrations were normal. The patient was given intravenous ampicillin for 3 days and then flomoxef sodium for 3 days, but her fever and skin lesions did not improve. Bacterial cultures from her pharyngeal swab, blood, stool, urine and cerebrospinal fluid were negative.

A skin biopsy on the third hospital day revealed sheet-like infiltration of neutrophils and lymphocytes in dermis without vasculitis (Fig.1D). The diagnosis of SS was based on the clinical and histological findings.[1,2] After dexamethason 2 mg/kg was administered on the fifth hospital day, the body temperature fell under 38ºC and the skin lesion resolved completely. The amount of dexamethason was tapered gradually and was terminated on the 14th hospital day without any reactivation of SS. Hematologic malignancy was ruled out by histological examination of bone marrow aspiration and peripheral blood specimen. On the 6th hospital day her stool was excreted through the vagina and rectovaginal fistula was revealed by urological examination. The HLA type of this patient was confirmed as A2, A31, B48, B61, and Cw3.

Discussion

Generally, SS has been classified by the associations as classic/idiopathic, parainflammatory, paraneoplastic, and pregnancy associated.[1,2] Infection has been noticed as a trigger of an autoreactive response possibly through a molecular mimicry mechanism of its antigens to self-antigens.[3,4] In this patient, infection due to her rectovaginal fistula could be a trigger of SS suggesting a parainflammatory associated type, as has been reported in SS (Table).[5-16] Neonatal cases should be recognized as the possible examples with a much greater contribution of their genetic background compared to the adult patients (Table).[5-16]

A significant correlation with HLA has been confirmed especially in adult Japanese patients, but HLA studies of infantile SS have not been reported yet.[3,4] The frequency of HLA-B54 is significantly higher in patients with SS, and recently it has also been confirmed in neurological SS with an additional evidence of correlation with HLA-Cw1.[4] According to previous reports, B54 and Cw1 had similar but subtle different motifs of peptides bound to HLA: proline (Pro) in position 2 (P2) and hydrophobic residues such as leucine (Leu), isoleucine, or alanine in position 9 (P9) on B54 and Pro in P3 and hydrophobic residues in P9 on Cw1.[5] This feature suggests that the same or similar peptides from a putative autoantigen in SS could be presented on these HLAs against autoreactive T cells as a primary target of the immunological responses.[3,4,17]

Our patient had HLA-A2, A31, B48, B61, and Cw3, not B54 or Cw1, which is closely associated with SS adult patients.[3,4] However, when we look at the reported motifs of the eluted peptides from these HLAs, they have some similarity with those of B54 or Cw1: Leu or Pro in P2 and hydrophobic residues in P9 on HLA-A2 and Pro in P3 and hydrophobic residues in P9 on HLA-Cw3. And structural analysis of HLA-A2 (PDB: 3BHB) and HLA-Cw3 (PDB: 1EFX) revealed that these residues could be accommodated into the respective pockets that have hydrophobic nature (Fig.2).[18] These findings suggest a possible contribution of HLA as in adult patients, but further studies especially on peptide sequences bound to HLA of SS patients should be valuable for understanding the molecular mechanism of the pathogenesis. Moreover, SS is usually well treated with steroid or immunosuppressant, but some cases require more intensive therapies.[1,2] Studies on the HLA bound peptides and HLA structural analysis for patients with SS would be valuable for understanding the molecular mechanism of the pathogenesis.[19,20]


Funding: None

Ethical approval: Not needed.

Competing interest: None declared.

Contributors: Omoya K, Naiki Y, Yoshioka S, Echidn Y, and Taga T performed the patient care. Aoki Y and Deguchi H performed the skin biopsy and the analysis. Omoya K and Kato Z wrote the first draft of this paper. Kato Z and Kondo N performed the clinical investigations including HLA analysis. All the authors contributed to the intellectual content and approved the final version. Kondo N is the guarantor.

References

1   von den Driesch P. Sweet's syndrome (acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis). J Am Acad Dermatol 1994;31:535-556.

2   Hospach T, von den Driesch P, Dannecker GE. Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome) in childhood and adolescence: two new patients and review of the literature on associated diseases. Eur J Pediatr 2009;168:1-9.

3   Mizoguchi M, Matsuki K, Mochizuki M, Watanabe R, Ogawa K, Harada S, et al. Human leukocyte antigen in Sweet's syndrome and its relationship to Behcet's disease. Arch Dermatol 1988;124:1069-1073.

4   Hisanaga K, Iwasaki Y, Itoyama Y. Neuro-Sweet disease. Clinical manifestations and criteria for diagnosis. Neurology 2005;64:1756-1761.

5   Parsapour K, Reep MD, Gohar K, Shah V, Church A, Shwayder TA. Familial Sweet's syndrome in 2 brothers, both seen in the first 2 weeks of life. J Am Acad Dermatol 2003;49:132-138.

6   Dunn TR, Saperstein HW, Biederman A, Kaplan RP. Sweet syndrome in a neonate with aseptic meningitis. Pediatr Dermatol 1992;9:288-292.

7   Sedel D, Huguet P, Lebbe C, Donadieu J, Odievre M, Labrune P. Sweet syndrome as the presenting manifestation of chronic granulomatous disease in an infant. Pediatr Dermatol 1994;11:237-240.

8   Itami S, Nishioka K. Sweet's syndrome in infancy. Br J Dermatol 1980;103:449-451.

9   Brady RC, Morris J, Connelly BL, Boiko S. Sweet's syndrome as an initial manifestation of pediatric human immunodeficiency virus infection. Pediatrics 1999;104:1142-1144.

10 Collins P, Rogers S, Keenan P, McCabe M. Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis in childhood (Sweet's syndrome). Br J Dermatol 1991;124:203-206.

11 Tuerlinckx D, Bodart E, Despontin K, Boutsen Y, Godding V, Ninane J. Sweet's syndrome with arthritis in an 8-month-old boy. J Rheumatol 1999;26:440-442.

12 Eghrari-Sabet JS, Hartley AH. Sweet's syndrome: an immunologically mediated skin disease? Ann Allergy 1994;72: 125-128.

13 Kibbi AG, Zaynoun ST, Kurban AK, Najjar SS. Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's disease): case report and review of the literature. Pediatr Dermatol 1985;3:40-44.

14 Saxe N, Gordon W. Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome). Four case reports. S Afr Med J 1978;53: 253-256.

15 Hazen PG, Kark EC, Davis BR, Carney JF, Kurczynski E. Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis in children. Report of two cases in male infants. Arch Dermatol 1983;119:998-1002.

16 Hassouna L, Nabulsi-Khalil M, Mroueh SM, Zaynoun ST, Kibbi AG. Multiple erythematous tender papules and nodules in an 11-month-old boy. Arch Dermatol 1996;132:1507-1510.

17 March SG, Partham P, Barber LD. The HLA. Facts Book. London: Academic Press, 2000.

18 Kato Z, Stern JN, Nakamura HK, Kuwata K, Kondo N, Strominger JL. Positioning of autoimmune TCR-Ob.2F3 and TCR-Ob.3D1 on the MBP85-99/HLA-DR2 complex. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2008;105:15523-15528.

19 Stern JN, Keskin DB, Zhang H, Lv H, Kato Z, Strominger JL. Amino acid copolymer-specific IL-10-secreting regulatory T cells that ameliorate autoimmune disease in mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2008;105:5172-5176.

20 Kato Z, Stern JN, Nakamura HK, Miyashita N, Kuwata K, Kondo N, et al. The autoimmune TCR-Ob.2F3 can bind to MBP85-99/HLA-DR2 having an unconventional mode as in TCR-Ob.1A12. Mol Immunol 2010;48:314-320

Received November 19, 2009

Accepted after revision February 9, 2010

 
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