The prevalence of psoriasis is 2% of the world's population (1). Inverse psoriasis is characterized by the development of erythematous shiny plaques at intertriginous areas of the body. The ...prevalence of only anogenital involvement appears to be low, but involvement of the anogenital area together with other areas is found in up to 45% of patients with psoriasis (2). A 21-year-old female student with a 3-month history of mild psoriasis (erythematosquamous plaque on the elbows and nail pitting on the nails of the hand) was referred to our Department. One month earlier, suddenly appearance of erythematous, smooth, clearly demarcated plaques was observed on the labia majora, the mons pubis, the perineal and perianal region together with a brownish hyperkeratotic papule on the pubic region (Figure 1, a-b). The patient underwent excisional biopsy at the Department of Surgery, and the pathohistological finding was unavailable to us. The elbows were treated with corticosteroid-keratolytic preparation, whereas the anogenital lesions were treated with moderately potent topical corticosteroids. In addition to anogenital erythema, on clinical examination we noticed an erythematosquamous plaque on the site of excision with a hyperkeratotic verrucous papule on the edge of the lesion (the Koebner phenomenon on the site of skin injury). In the pubic region, we noticed two hyperkeratotic papules and a few verrucous papules on labia majora. Localized dermatophyte or candida infection were excluded with a KOH test and scrapings culture. Serology for syphilis, HIV, and hepatitis were negative. Cervical Pap smear was normal. Biopsy of erythematosus lesion from the mons pubis was conclusive for psoriasis, and of the keratotic papule with the genital wart with positive HPV 6 and 11. The patient's older sister had chronic plaque psoriasis. We employed physically ablative methods like liquid nitrogen cryosurgery, electrocauterization, and curettage, applied topical agents like 0.5% podophyllotoxin solution, 20% podophyllin, and 80% trichloroacetic acid, and treated the psoriatic lesions with a short course of moderate-potency corticosteroids and tacrolimus ointment. All therapeutic attempts were ineffective for curing both diseases. Our patient either had psoriasis with sparse genital warts or exacerbation of multiple anogenital warts (Figure 2, a-b). Anogenital psoriasis is a skin disease that causes great discomfort. The disease-related quality of life is significantly reduced, especially regarding sexual behavior. Therapy for either anogenital psoriasis or genital warts is not entirely satisfactory. Many topical agents suitable for use on the psoriatic lesions on the body, such as coal tar, anthralin, vitamin D derivatives or retinoids, may be too irritating in the anogenital region. The most useful therapy for treatment of anogenital psoriasis are moderately potent topical corticosteroids and topical tacrolimus or pimecrolimus (1). However, corticosteroid-induced atrophy is possible in intertriginous sites. The Koebner phenomenon isomorphic response is the appearance of new skin lesions on areas of cutaneous injury in otherwise healthy skin (3). About 25% of patients with psoriasis have elicitation of psoriatic lesions by injury to the skin (4). Other than in patients with psoriasis, the Koebner phenomenon can be found in other skin diseases like vitiligo, lichen planus, lichen nitidus, pityriasis rubra pilaris, flat warts, and keratosis follicularis (Darier disease) (5). According to Eyre at al., about 67% patients with psoriasis (4) present with clearing of psoriatic lesions following skin injury (positive "reverse" Koebner reaction) (4). There is no single treatment for genital warts that is 100% effective, and different types of treatment are very often combined. Accepted methods of treatment involve chemical and physical destruction or removal (6). Since psoriasis koebnerizes, any destructive technique may exacerbate the psoriasis. Coexistence of anogenital psoriasis and HPV presents a huge therapeutic problem because a therapy for psoriasis such as corticosteroids can provoke appearance and/or reappearance of HPV infection, while some therapies for anogenital warts, like cryotherapy, curettage, laser ablation, electrosurgery, or surgery can provoke the appearance and/or reappearance of psoriatic infection due to the Koebner phenomenon.
Autoimmune progesterone dermatitis (APD) is rare autoimmune response to endogenous progesterone or to earlier exposure to exogenous progesterone (1). Skin lesions typically occur due to increases in ...progesterone during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (2). A-31-year-old mother of two children presented to our Department with a 5-year history of pruritic and painful erythematosus macules, papules, and patches on her neck, pectoral region, and face, which appeared 2-3 days before the onset of menses and gradually resolved 7-10 days later (Figure 1). The lesions first appeared 10 months after her second pregnancy and a few months after she had started using oral contraceptive pills (OCP) containing gestodene combined with ethinyloestradiol. A few months before presenting to us, the lesions had started spreading on her forearms, elbows, and pretibial areas. Since one year prior to our visit she had complained of occasional urticaria with angioedema one week prior to menses, which resolved after menses. The lesions were accompanied by malaise, headache, and fatigue. The patient was asymptomatic between the outbreaks. She reported that she had been using various local corticosteroids, peroral antihistamines, and prednisone for the treatment of her skin lesions, but this treatment had not improved her symptoms. She suffered from mild seasonal rhinoconjunctivitis. We performed multiple laboratory tests that were unremarkable. Histopathological examination of a biopsy taken from a lesion on the neck showed epidermal hyperplasia and nonspecific mild dermal inflammation. Since progesterone was not available in aqueous solution in our country, we did not perform an intradermal test, but we performed a lymphocyte transformation test (LTT) to medroxyprogesterone and estradiol. The patient's lymphocytes showed markedly enhanced proliferation to medroxyprogesterone in vitro, while being negative to estradiol. We had performed control LTT in 10 healthy controls and 10 patients with atopy, and such hyperactivity was not observed in any of them. We performed an oral provocation test with OCP containing gestodene combined with ethinyloestradiol. Two days after commencing treatment, the patient developed widespread dermatitis (Figure 2) with nausea, malaise, and angioedema. The patient was informed about treatment options and possible side-effects. She started with OCP with the lowest amount of progesterone, containing ethinyloestradiol and dropirenone for treatment of APD, but terminated treatment after the second cycle due to a worsening of the skin lesions and urticaria accompanied with angioedema. At the time of writing, our patient continues to have premenstrual flares. The typical symptoms of APD are skin lesions such as eczema, erythema multiforme, prurigo, stomatitis, papulopustular lesions, folliculitis, urticaria, angioedema, and rarely anaphylaxis (2) that develop 3-10 days before and subside 1-2 days after menses, with recurrent cyclic aggravation (1,3,4). Frequently, patients have a history of exogenous progesterone intake (1,5,6), as in our patient, which could have resulted in antibody formation. The diagnosis of APD is established by an appropriate clinical history (premenstrual flare of skin lesions), a progesterone intradermal test, an intramuscular (7), oral (8), or intravaginal (1, 6) progesterone challenge test, and circulating antibodies to progesterone. Progesterone testing has not been standardized. Most of the sex hormones are not suitable for testing since they contain an oily component that can produce an irritant test reaction. Gestodene, which was used for the oral provocation test in our patient, is a potent progesterone (9). The LTT shows reactions to circulating lymphocytes and reflects immune reactions within the body. The goal of treatment is suppression of ovulation. Currently, the first-line choice of therapy is a combination oral contraceptive (3). We believe that OCP have a limited effect because all of them contain a progesterone component. If this treatment is ineffective, patients have been treated with danazol, gonadotropin releasing hormone analogs (3,4,6), conjugated estrogens (7), tamoxifen, oophorectomy (8), and progestogen desensitization (10) with varying success.
Genital human papillomavirus (HPV) infections are among the most common sexually transmitted diseases. HPV is associated with a spectrum of diseases ranging from benign vulgar verrucae and ...condylomata accuminata to malignant cancers of the cervix, vulva, anus and penis. Genital HPV is in most cases transmitted sexually, but non-sexual routes of transmission, such as perinatal and autoinoculation, are possible. Men can be a reservoir of the virus that lives in latent or subclinical form on genital mucosa. Such an asymptomatic infection may be an oncogenic factor in the development of cervical cancer Colposcopic examination of the genitalia after the application of 3-5% acetic acid is a reliable method for the identification of subclinical HPV infection. Successful therapy of anogenital warts is characterized by their complete clearance, as well as by the lack of recurrence. Current treatments do not reliably eradicate HPV infections. The diagnosis and therapy of HPV infection in men is potentially beneficial because the eradication of penile HPV infection may decrease the reservoir of the virus.
Karcinom vrata maternice u svijetu je drugi po učestalosti u žena. U Hrvatskoj je na osmome mjestu zastupljenosti. Ova vrsta karcinoma je bolest mlađih žena. Cervikalne intraepitelijalne neoplazije i ...karcinom vrata maternice su povezani su s trajnom infekcijom visoko onkogenim sojevima HPV-a. Cijena liječenja bolesti ovisi o njenom stadiju. Cjepivo Cervarix, primijenjeno u još spolno neaktivnih djevojčica i djevojaka, je u multinacionalnim dvostruko slijepim randomiziranim studijama pokazalo svoju visoku učinkovitost u stvaranju cirkulirajućih protutijela u serumu te smanjenju prevalencije HPV infekcije, preinvazivnih lezija i karcinoma vrata maternice. Cjepivo Cervarix također smanjuje prevalenciju trajne infekcije HPV-om u spolno aktivnih žena. Korištenjem matematičkih modela, uz visoku učinkovitost cjepiva od 100%, predviđa se 60–75% smanjenje morbiditeta i mortaliteta od karcinoma vrata maternice. Analizom izravnih troškova liječenja karcinoma vrata maternice i neizravnih troškova te kvalitetom života i usporedbom s cijenom cijepljenja u Hrvatskoj bi se godišnje moglo uštedjeti oko 50 milijuna kuna.
A 21-year-old female student with a 3-month history of mild psoriasis (erythematosquamous plaque on the elbows and nail pitting on the nails of the hand) was referred to our Department. One month ...earlier, suddenly appearance of erythematous, smooth, clearly demarcated plaques was observed on the labia majora, the mons pubis, the perineal and perianal region together with a brownish hyperkera-totic papule on the pubic region (Figure 1, a-b). The patient underwent excisional biopsy at the Department of Surgery, and the pathohistological finding was unavailable to us. The elbows were treated with corticosteroid-keratolytic preparation, whereas the anogenital lesions were treated with moderately potent topical corticosteroids. In addition to anogeni-tal erythema, on clinical examination we noticed an erythematosquamous plaque on the site of excision with a hyperkeratotic verrucous papule on the edge of the lesion (the Koebner phenomenon on the site of skin injury). In the pubic region, we noticed two hyperkeratotic papules and a few verrucous papules on labia majora. Localized dermatophyte or candida infection were excluded with a KOH test and scrapings culture. Serology for syphilis, HIV, and hepatitis were negative. Cervical Pap smear was normal. Biop-sy of erythematosus lesion from the mons pubis was conclusive for psoriasis, and of the keratotic papule with the genital wart with positive HPV 6 and 11. The patient’s older sister had chronic plaque psoriasis.
Sažetak. Cilj rada. Retrospektivna studija nakon primjene kombiniranog ultrazvučno-biokemijskog testa probira trisomija u prvom tromjesečju trudnoće. Metode. Od veljače 2006. do srpnja 2008. godine ...probir je učinjen u 1112 trudnica između 10. i 14. tjedna trudnoće. Individualni rizik trisomije 21, 18 i 13 izračunavali smo kombinacijom dobnog rizika trudnice, ultrazvučnih biljega u ploda (debljina nuhalnog nabora – NT, udaljenosti tjeme-trtica – CRL) te biokemijskih biljega u serumu trudnice (slobodni -hCG i PAPP-A), pomoću licenciranog računalnog programa (Typolog). Koncentracije biokemijskih biljega smo određivali imunometrijskom kemiluminiscentnom metodom (IMMULITE). Biokemijske biljege, kao i NT u odnosu na CRL, izrazili smo u obliku višekratnika MoM, u odnosu na dnevne regresijske medijane za odgovarajuću gestaciju u neugroženim trudnoćama. Rezultate smo obradili nakon dovršenih svih ispitanih trudnoća. Ukupno su 62 testirane trudnice imale povećani kombinirani rizik trisomije 21, od kojih je 10 trudnica imalo i povećani rizik trisomije 18/13. Četiri trisomije 21 i jedna trisomija 18 otkrivene su prenatalnom dijagnozom; stopa detekcije bila je 100% (5/5). U trudnica s povećanim rizikom u probiru učinjeno je 7 biopsija koriona i 38 ranih amniocenteza. Udio lažno-pozitivnih rezultata bio je 5.1%. Zaključak. Prvi rezultati provođenja kombiniranog probirnog testa u Hrvatskoj potvrdili su visoku osjetljivost i veću specifičnost, u poredbi s biokemijskim probirnim testom u drugom tromjesečju trudnoće.