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OncoTargets and Therapy 2019The discovery that mutations in the gene are present in up to 50% of patients with lung adenocarcinoma, and the development of highly efficacious EGFR tyrosine kinase... (Review)
Review
The discovery that mutations in the gene are present in up to 50% of patients with lung adenocarcinoma, and the development of highly efficacious EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), has revolutionized the way this common malignancy is treated. Three generations of EGFR TKIs are now approved for use in mutation-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC); the first-generation agents erlotinib, gefitinib, and icotinib; the second-generation ErbB family blockers afatinib and dacomitinib; and most recently, osimertinib, a third-generation EGFR TKI. The second-generation agents have demonstrated impressive efficacy relative to both standard platinum-based chemotherapy and first-generation EGFR TKIs, significantly improving response and progression-free and overall survival. Data from real-world studies suggest that afatinib is as effective and well tolerated in routine clinical practice as it is in clinical studies and is effective in patients with certain uncommon mutations, patients with brain metastases, and older patients. Few real-world data are available for dacomitinib in the first-line setting. Afatinib and dacomitinib have similar safety profiles, with acne/skin dryzness, diarrhea, stomatitis, and paronychia the most common adverse events (AEs) reported in clinical and real-world studies. Numerous studies have shown that tolerability-guided dose reductions can help manage afatinib-related AEs without reducing efficacy. As the number of therapeutic options for advanced NSCLC increases, the optimal choice for first-line treatment will be determined by considering patient factors such as the presence of brain metastases, the type of mutation, tolerability, and subsequent therapy options for long-term treatment.
PubMed: 31496745
DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S198945 -
Dermatology Online Journal Jul 2017Retronychia is a recently described cause of ingrowth of the nail plate on the ventral surface of the proximal nail fold. Clinical features are repeated episodes of...
Retronychia is a recently described cause of ingrowth of the nail plate on the ventral surface of the proximal nail fold. Clinical features are repeated episodes of proximal paronychia, nail plate thickening, and occasionally granulation tissue emergence. The usual treatments for paronychia such as antibiotics and antifungals are ineffective in these cases. Avulsion of the nail plate is the treatment of choice for these patients, but effective treatment is usually delayed owing to inadequate diagnosis. Herein, we describe a 28-year-old woman with a case of retronychia. She was treated for two months with oral and topical antifungal and antibiotics by her general practitioner. After proper diagnosis and avulsion of the nail she presented a normal and non-painful growth of the affected nail.
Topics: Adult; Female; Hallux; Humans; Nails, Ingrown; Paronychia
PubMed: 29469707
DOI: No ID Found -
American Family Physician Dec 2003Hand infections can result in significant morbidity if not appropriately diagnosed and treated. Host factors, location, and circumstances of the infection are important... (Review)
Review
Hand infections can result in significant morbidity if not appropriately diagnosed and treated. Host factors, location, and circumstances of the infection are important guides to initial treatment strategies. Many hand infections improve with early splinting, elevation, appropriate antibiotics and, if an abscess is present, incision and drainage. Tetanus prophylaxis is indicated in patients who have at-risk infections. Paronychia, an infection of the epidermis bordering the nail, commonly is precipitated by localized trauma. Treatment consists of incision and drainage, warm-water soaks and, sometimes, oral antibiotics. A felon is an abscess of the distal pulp of the fingertip. An early felon may be amenable to elevation, oral antibiotics, and warm water or saline soaks. A more advanced felon requires incision and drainage. Herpetic whitlow is a painful infection caused by the herpes simplex virus. Early treatment with oral antiviral agents may hasten healing. Pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis and clenched-fist injuries are more serious infections that often require surgical intervention. Pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis is an acute synovial space infection involving a flexor tendon sheath. Treatment consists of parenteral antibiotics and sheath irrigation. A clenched-fist injury usually is the result of an altercation and often involves injury to the extensor tendon, joint capsule, and bone. Wound exploration, copious irrigation, and appropriate antibiotics can prevent undesired outcomes.
Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antiviral Agents; Bites, Human; Diagnosis, Differential; Hand; Humans; Infections; Penicillins
PubMed: 14677662
DOI: No ID Found -
Frontiers in Medicine 2022Common autoimmune bullous diseases (AIBDs) include pemphigus and bullous pemphigoid (BP), which are primarily caused by IgG autoantibodies against the structural...
Common autoimmune bullous diseases (AIBDs) include pemphigus and bullous pemphigoid (BP), which are primarily caused by IgG autoantibodies against the structural proteins of desmosomes at the cell-cell junction and hemidesmosomes at the epidermal-dermal junction. Few studies have assessed nail changes in patients with pemphigus or BP. In the present study, we collected the clinical data of 191 patients with AIBDs (108 patients with pemphigus and 83 patients with BP) and 200 control subjects. Nail changes were observed in 77.0% (147/191), 77.8% (84/108), and 75.9% (63/83) of patients with AIBDs, pemphigus, and BP, respectively, and 14.5% (29/200) of control subjects. Beau's lines and paronychia were the most common nail involvement, observed in 22.5% (43/191) and 22.5% (43/191) of patients with AIBDs, 25.0% (27/108) and 25.9% (28/108) of patients with pemphigus, 19.3% (16/83) and 18.1% (15/83) of patients with BP, respectively. The autoimmune bullous skin disorder intensity score (ABSIS) and the onset time of patients with pemphigus or BP with nail changes were different. Onychomycosis accounted for 21.5% (41/191) of all patients with AIBDs. The ABSIS was correlated with nail involvement in patients with BP ( = 0.46, < 0.001), and weakly correlated with nail involvement in patients with AIBDs ( = 0.37, < 0.001), pemphigus ( = 0.29, = 0.009), and pemphigus vulgaris (PV; = 0.35, = 0.008). No correlation was observed between nail involvement and disease antibody titers. In conclusion, nail changes are frequently observed in patients with pemphigus and BP. The type and onset time of nail changes may indicate the severity of pemphigus and BP, which warrants the attention of dermatologists.
PubMed: 36203762
DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.933608 -
Expert Consensus on the Management of Adverse Events from EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors in the UK.Drugs Aug 2015Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) such as gefitinib, erlotinib, and afatinib are standard-of-care for first-line treatment of... (Review)
Review
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) such as gefitinib, erlotinib, and afatinib are standard-of-care for first-line treatment of EGFR-mutant advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). These drugs have a proven benefit in terms of higher response rate, delaying progression and improvement of quality of life over palliative platinum-based chemotherapy. The most common adverse events (AEs) are gastrointestinal (GI) (diarrhoea and stomatitis/mucositis) and cutaneous (rash, dry skin and paronychia). These are usually mild, but if they become moderate or severe, they can have a negative impact on the patient's quality of life (QOL) and lead to dose modifications or drug discontinuation. Appropriate management of AEs, including prophylactic measures, supportive medications, treatment delays and dose reductions, is essential. A consensus meeting of a UK-based multidisciplinary panel composed of medical and clinical oncologists with a special interest in lung cancer, dermatologists, gastroenterologists, lung cancer nurse specialists and oncology pharmacists was held to develop guidelines on prevention and management of cutaneous (rash, dry skin and paronychia) and GI (diarrhoea, stomatitis and mucositis) AEs associated with the administration of EGFR-TKIs. These guidelines detail supportive measures, treatment delays and dose reductions for EGFR-TKIs. Although the focus of the guidelines is to support healthcare professionals in UK clinical practice, it is anticipated that the management strategies proposed will also be applicable in non-UK settings.
Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung; Consensus; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; ErbB Receptors; Gastrointestinal Diseases; Humans; Lung Neoplasms; Molecular Targeted Therapy; Mutation; Protein Kinase Inhibitors; Quality of Life; Risk Factors; Signal Transduction; Skin Diseases; Treatment Outcome; United Kingdom
PubMed: 26187773
DOI: 10.1007/s40265-015-0434-6 -
BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.) Mar 1995
Topics: Animals; Humans; Leeches; Paronychia
PubMed: 7888966
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.310.6979.603c -
Cureus Dec 2021Cutaneous metastases occur in approximately 10% of oncology patients as a feature of a persistent solid tumor or the harbinger of recurrent neoplastic disease. However,...
Cutaneous metastases occur in approximately 10% of oncology patients as a feature of a persistent solid tumor or the harbinger of recurrent neoplastic disease. However, they can be the presenting manifestation of an unsuspected visceral malignancy in one percent of previously cancer-free individuals. Metastatic skin lesions from breast carcinoma are diverse in their appearance. The clinical presentation of cutaneous metastases in three women with breast cancer is described and both the morphology of skin metastases caused by breast carcinoma and the conditions that are mimicked by breast cancer cutaneous metastases are reviewed. Skin metastases from breast carcinoma commonly appear as firm, flesh-colored to red, smooth or ulcerated or crusted, nodules, papules, and plaques on the ipsilateral chest wall and breast. However, unique sites of breast cancer cutaneous metastases are the eyelids, inframammary folds, ipsilateral lymphedematous arm, scalp, subungual nail bed, and umbilicus; in addition, skin metastases can occur in mastectomy scars and radiation therapy ports. Carcinoma erysipelatoides, carcinoma telangiectoides, and carcinoma en cuirasse are classic patterns of skin metastases that can be observed in breast cancer patients; carcinoma hemorrhagiectoides is a recently observed skin metastases pattern that has also been noted in oncology patients with breast carcinoma. The pleomorphic skin lesions of breast cancer metastases can masquerade as benign cutaneous lesions and tumors (such as a collision tumor, cyst, dermatofibroma, and milia-en-plaque), cutaneous malignancies (such as melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers), infections (such as cellulitis, folliculitis, herpes zoster, and paronychia), reactive erythema (such as erythema annulare centrifugum, and urticaria), skin conditions (such as alopecia areata, dermatitis, hidradenitis suppurativa, and scleroderma), and vascular lesions (such as angiokeratoma, angiosarcoma, lymphangioma circumscriptum, purpura, and pyogenic granuloma). In addition, breast carcinoma cutaneous metastases can not only mimic other miscellaneous conditions such as erosions and ulcers, Paget's disease, and papillomatosis cutis lymphostatica but also have unusual morphology such as targetoid lesions or a sharply demarcated red infiltration of the nasal tip similar to a clown's nose. The possibility of a breast cancer cutaneous metastasis should be considered in the evaluation of a patient with breast cancer--and although less likely, in a cancer-free individual--who develops a new and/or a treatment-unresponsive cutaneous lesion. A biopsy of the skin lesion is necessary to confirm the diagnosis of breast cancer cutaneous metastasis.
PubMed: 35028206
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.20301 -
International Journal of Critical... Apr 2014Tulipalin A induced phytotoxicity is a persistent allergic contact dermatitides documented in floral workers exposed to Alstroemeria and its cultivars.[1] The causative...
Tulipalin A induced phytotoxicity is a persistent allergic contact dermatitides documented in floral workers exposed to Alstroemeria and its cultivars.[1] The causative allergen is tulipalin A, a toxic glycoside named for the tulip bulbs from which it was first isolated.[2] The condition is characterized by fissured acropulpitis, often accompanied by hyperpigmentation, onychorrhexis, and paronychia. More of the volar surface may be affected in sensitized florists. Dermatitis and paronychia are extremely common conditions and diagnostic errors may occur. A thorough patient history, in conjunction with confirmatory patch testing with a bulb sliver and tuliposide A exposure, can prevent misdiagnosis. We report a case of Tulipalin A induced phytotoxicity misdiagnosed as an unresolved tinea manuum infection in a patient evaluated for occupational exposure.
PubMed: 25024947
DOI: 10.4103/2229-5151.134187 -
Medical Mycology Journal 2019We report here the results of the 2016 epidemiological survey of dermatomycosis in Japan. In total, 6,776 cases were analyzed as follows: dermatophytosis, 5,772 cases... (Review)
Review
We report here the results of the 2016 epidemiological survey of dermatomycosis in Japan. In total, 6,776 cases were analyzed as follows: dermatophytosis, 5,772 cases (85.2%); candidiasis, 757 cases (11.2%); Malassezia infection, 235 cases (3.5%); and other fungal infections, 11 cases (0.2%). In dermatophytosis, tinea pedis was the most frequent (3,314 cases: male, 1,705; female, 1,609), followed by tinea unguium (1,634 cases: male, 766; female, 868), tinea corporis (423 cases: male, 241; female, 182); tinea cruris (316 cases: male, 242; female, 74); tinea manuum (58 cases: male, 29; female, 29); tinea capitus, Celsus' kerion (26 cases: male, 19; female, 7); and tinea barbae (1 case: male, 1). The most frequent pathogen was Trichophyton rubrum. In candidiasis, candidal intertrigo was the most frequent (181 cases: male, 98; female, 83), followed by oral candidiasis (165 cases: male, 84; female, 81), genital candidiasis (119 cases: male, 45; female, 74), diaper candidiasis (113 cases: male, 49; female, 64), erosio interdigitalis (63 cases: male, 13; female, 50), onychomycosis (41 cases: male, 17; female, 24), onychia et paronychia (28 cases: male, 2; female, 26), and angular cheilitis (23 cases: male, 6; female, 17). Although the number of cases varied depending on the role of each cooperating medical institution in the area and on population composition, no significant differences in the frequencies of clinical types were observed.
Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Candidiasis; Child; Child, Preschool; Dermatomycoses; Female; Humans; Infant; Japan; Malassezia; Male; Middle Aged; Onychomycosis; Prevalence; Sex Factors; Time Factors; Tinea; Tinea Capitis; Tinea Pedis; Trichophyton; Young Adult
PubMed: 31474694
DOI: 10.3314/mmj.19.007 -
Journal Der Deutschen Dermatologischen... Apr 2013Lichen planus is characterized by lichenoid, polygonal papules with fine white lines, called Wickham striae. Lesions most commonly occur on the limbs and on the dorsal... (Review)
Review
Lichen planus is characterized by lichenoid, polygonal papules with fine white lines, called Wickham striae. Lesions most commonly occur on the limbs and on the dorsal aspect of the trunk. At the same time often leukoplakia of mucous membranes as well as nail disorders are seen. There are numerous variants of lichen planus which can be distinguished from the classical form on the basis of morphology and distribution of the lesions. The typical primary lesion of lichen planus may be replaced by other forms, such as patches, hyperkeratoses, ulcerations, or bullous lesions. Moreover, distribution patterns of these lesions may vary and include erythrodermic, inverse or linear arrangements. In contrast to these numerous clinical features, histologic findings remain characteristic in the variants, so that the diagnosis can be made securely. Differential diagnoses of lichen planus include diverse dermatoses such as bullous pemphigoid or paronychia.
Topics: Diagnosis, Differential; Humans; Lichen Planus
PubMed: 23320493
DOI: 10.1111/ddg.12031