Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Letter to the Editor
2011:77:2;217-219
doi: 10.4103/0378-6323.77476
PMID: 21393964

Acute graft versus host disease

Mahesh K Kumawat, Sujay Khandpur
 Department of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi, India

Correspondence Address:
Sujay Khandpur
Department of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi - 110 029
India
How to cite this article:
Kumawat MK, Khandpur S. Acute graft versus host disease. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2011;77:217-219
Copyright: (C)2011 Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, and Leprology

Sir,

Hematopoietic cell transplantation is the preferred therapy for certain life-threatening diseases of the lympho-hematopoietic system, including acute leukemia′s, aplastic anemia, and certain immunodeficiency diseases. Moderate to severe acute graft versus host disease (GVHD) affects 9-35% patients undergoing allogenic stem cell transplantation despite using human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched sibling donors and immunosuppression after grafting. The main targets of acute GVHD in humans are the skin and gastrointestinal tract including the gut and liver, of which the skin is the earliest and the most frequent target. Herein we report a case of acute GVHD presenting as widespread erythematous intensely pruritic macular rash associated with watery to bloody diarrhea and jaundice, following allogenic stem cell transplantation for aplastic anemia.

A 30-year-old patient with severe aplastic anemia underwent allogenic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation from an HLA-identical sibling sister. Following transplantation, he was put on fludarabin 30 mg/m 2 for 5 days, cyclophosphamide 60 mg/kg/day for 2 days, anti-thymocyte globuline (ATG) 30 mg/kg/day for 3 days, inj. cyclosporine-A 1.5 mg/kg/day from day 1 until oral intake was possible and methotrexate 10 mg/kg on day +1 and methotrexate 7 mg/kg on days 3 and 6, as a preparative regimen. Post-transplantation, the course was uneventful for first 30 days. On 31st day, he developed high grade fever followed by pruritic erythematous nonblanchable macular rash over the chest, with watery diarrhea (four to five times/h). During next 3-4 days, the erythematous rash extended to involve the shoulders, back, abdomen, neck and proximal extremities and also involved the palms and soles [Figure - 1]. Oral mucosa was normal. Watery diarrhea changed to bloody diarrhea (8-10 episode/h) with persistence of fever. The patient also developed clinical jaundice and serum bilirubin ranged from 5.8 to 17.3 mg/dl and SGOT/SGPT from 61/103 and 85/155, respectively. A skin biopsy from the erythematous macule revealed focal parakeratosis, dyskeratotic keratinocytes, spongiosis, exocytosis, basal cell damage, pigment incontinence, and dermal lympho-histiocytic infiltrate. Similar changes also involved the hair follicle [Figure - 2]. Endoscopic examination of the GIT showed sloughing of entire mucosa of the second part of duodenum. A diagnosis of acute GVHD involving the skin (Stage 2), duodenum and liver was made and patient initiated on methylprednisolone 2 mg/kg/day, with resolution of the rash with exfoliation and reduction in frequency of stool. However the patient died after 25 days due to sepsis.

Figure 1: Erythematous macular rash diffusely involving the whole abdomen
Figure 2: Dermal edema and mucin deposition with lymphocytic vasculitis, consistent with Degos disease (H and E, ×40)

Barnes and Loutit first described GVHD in mice as a syndrome called "secondary disease" to differentiate it from primary disease of radiation sickness, after observing fatal disease (skin abnormalities and diarrhea) on introducing allogeneic spleen cells. [1] Acute GVHD is a distinctive syndrome of dermatitis, hepatitis and enteritis developing within 100 days of allogeneic hematopoietic-cell transplantation (HCT). Chronic GVHD is a more diverse syndrome developing after day 100. Acute GVHD affect 9-35% patients undergoing standard allogeneic stem cell transplantation despite using HLA-matched sibling donors and immunosuppression after grafting. [2] Allogeneic stem cell transplantation is the most common clinical scenario although it may arise after maternal to fetal transfer of lymphocytes, blood transfusion and solid organ transplantation, most commonly of liver. [3],[4] The skin is the earliest and most frequent target, and involvement begins with faint erythematous macules at any site, often the palms, soles, and pinna. Edema and tenderness often accompany. Pruritus is an uncommon complaint. As the acute GVHD evolves, the distribution of erythematous macules increases, becoming confluent especially over upper back. At a later stage, erythroderma and toxic epidermal necrolysis may ensue. A staging scheme has been proposed based on body surface area (BSA) involvement. Stage 1-cutaneous eruption involving < 25% BSA, Stage 2-cutaneous eruption involving 25-50 % BSA, Stage 3-erythroderma, Stage 4-vesicles and bullae. [5]

Watery diarrhea may develop within days to weeks after the cutaneous lesions, its severity often paralleling skin involvement; it may become bloody and protracted. Liver involvement is expressed clinically by jaundice and tender hepatomegaly. With successful treatment, the eruption resolves with desquamation in the same general progression as its appearance.

In our case, on 31 st day of stem cell transplantation, patient simultaneously developed fever, watery diarrhea and severely pruritic macular erythematous rash over chest which progressively involved other sites. Palmoplantar involvement was not the first feature in our case. Pruritus is an uncommon complaint in acute GVHD but in our case the rash was intensely pruritic. It was associated with diarrhea and clinical jaundice.

The clinical differential diagnosis of acute cutaneous GVHD include drug hypersensitivity eruption, e.g. to cyclosporine or recombinant cytokines, viral exanthem, eruption of lymphocyte recovery, and transient acantholytic dermatosis. A skin biopsy helps to differentiate GVHD from its mimickers. Early changes include focal basal cell vacuolation and sparse superficial perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate with exocytosis into epidermis and follicular epithelium. Established lesions show more pronounced vacuolation, focal spongiosis, lymphocytic infiltration and necrotic epidermis. The grading scheme for the histopathologic features of acute cutaneous GVHD is as follows: Grade 0-normal skin or changes not referable to graft-versus-host disease, Grade 1-basal vacuolization of the dermo-epidermal junction, Grade 2-basal vacuolization, necrotic epidermal cell, lymphocytes in the dermis and/or epidermis, Grade 3-sub-epidermal cleft formation plus grade 2 changes, Grade 4-separation of epidermis from dermis plus grade 2 changes. [6]

Corticosteroids are the mainstay of treatment of acute GVHD. When this approach fails, second line therapy like cyclosporine 2-15 mg/kg/day, mycophenolate mofetil 2 g/day, tacrolimus 4-20 mg/day, ATG 15 mg/kg/day, etanercept 25 mg biweekly, infliximab 10 mg/kg/week, and OKT3 5 mg/day may be required. The overall grade of acute GVHD is predictive of the patient′s outcome, with the highest rates of mortality in those with grade IV GVHD. The response to treatment is also predictive of outcomes. Patients with no response or with progression have a mortality rate as high as 75% compared with 20-25% in those with a complete response.

References
1.
Barnes DW, Loutit JF, Micklem HS. "Secondary disease" of radiation chimeras: A syndrome due to lymphoid aplasia. Ann N Y Acad Sci 1962;99:374-85.
[Google Scholar]
2.
Margolis J, Vogelsang G. An old drug for a new disease: Pentostatin (nipent) in acute graft versus host disease. Semin Oncol 2000;27:72-7.
[Google Scholar]
3.
Grogan TM, Brovghton DD, Doyle WF. Graft-versus-host reaction (GVHR): A case report suggesting GVHR occurred as a result of maternofetal cell transfer. Arch Pathol 1975;99:330-4.
[Google Scholar]
4.
Schmuth M, Vogel W, Weinlich G. Cutaneous lesions and the presenting sign of acute graft-versus-host disease following liver transplantation. Br J Dermatol 1999;141:901-4.
[Google Scholar]
5.
Glucksberg H, Storb R, Fefer A, Buckner CD, Neiman PE, Clift RA, et al. Clinical manifestations of graft-versus host disease in human recipients of marrow from HLA-matched sibling donors. Transplantation 1974;18:295-304.
[Google Scholar]
6.
Lerner KG, Kau GF, Storb R. Histopathology of graft versus host reaction in human recipients of marrow from HLA-matched sibling donors. Transplantation 1974;18:367.
[Google Scholar]

Fulltext Views
2,205

PDF downloads
1,061
Show Sections