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CASE REPORT

A Case Report of Possibly Related Acute Generalized Exanthematous Pustulosis with Staphylococcus pettenkoferi

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Pages 673-676 | Received 06 Jan 2023, Accepted 05 Mar 2023, Published online: 17 Mar 2023

Abstract

Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP), an uncommon severe cutaneous adverse reaction, is believed to be a T cell-mediated hypersensitivity reaction, of which the most common cause is medication. However, infections have also been reported to be associated with AGEP. Here, we present a case of AGEP possibly related with Staphylococcus pettenkoferi.

Introduction

Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP), a severe cutaneous adverse reaction, was first described by Baker and Ryan in 1968 and named by Beylot et al in 1980Citation1,Citation2 AGEP is characterized by an acute onset of mainly small non-follicular pustules on an erythematous base and accompanied by fever (>38°C). Increased neutrophil count and high sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP) are also common in AGEP.Citation3 The incidence of AGEP is 1 to 5 per million patients a year,Citation4 while the mortality rate is estimated to be around 5%.Citation5

Ninety percent of AGEP are drug-induced.Citation6 A small number cases are associated with infections.Citation7,Citation8 Here we report a case of typical AGEP associated with S. pettenkoferi, a relatively rare coagulase Negative Staphylococcus (CoNS).

Case Report

A 17-year-old boy with a 6-day history of skin rash and a 4-day history of high fever sought medical advice in our department of dermatology. The highest temperature was 40.5°C. The patient experienced sore throats and knee pain during movement. He did not recall any history of obvious inducement, especially suspect drugs. After empirical ceftriaxone sodium for injection anti-infection and loratadine tablets anti-allergy treatment for two days, his symptoms did not improve significantly. Physical examination revealed generalized small pustules on an erythematous base over the trunk, extremities, and flexures (). There were no lesions on the oral mucosa and genital skin. The patient was otherwise healthy and denied a family history of psoriasis. Laboratory tests showed increased white blood cells of 17.76×109/L (normal range 4.0–10.0×109/L); neutrophilia of 15.81×109/L (normal range 2.0–7.0×109/L); high C-reactive protein of 108.81 mg/L (normal range 0–8.0mg/L). Biochemical examination demonstrated that alanine aminotransferase was 100 U/L (normal range 7–40 U/L); total bilirubin was 44.9umol/L (normal range 0–21 U/L); direct bilirubin was 32.8 mol/L (normal range 0–8 U/L); glutamyl transpeptidase was 156U/L (normal range 7–45 U/L). Procalcitonin level was 1.13ng/mL(0.00–0.50). Metagenomic examination of pathogens in peripheral blood indicated the sequence number of S. pettenkoferi was 1330. Blood bacterial culture did not growth. The throat swab culture was negative. CT scan of the lungs showed that there were a few exudative changes with interstitial changes in both lungs and pleural effusion. Histopathology of a skin biopsy specimen showed subcorneal neutrophilic pustule and edema, as well as peripheral infiltration of neutrophils and lymphocytes in the superficial dermis (). A diagnosis of acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP) was considered based on rash morphology, clinical progress and cutaneous histopathology. Then, we used methylprednisolone 40mg per day to control the inflammation, and linezolid injection 0.2 q12h for anti-infection treatment. After 4 days, the pustules subsided and the erythema became dull in color.

Figure 1 (AD) Generalized small pustules on an erythematous base were present over the trunk, extremities, and flexures.

Figure 1 (A–D) Generalized small pustules on an erythematous base were present over the trunk, extremities, and flexures.

Figure 2 Subcorneal neutrophilic pustule and edema, as well as peripheral infiltration of neutrophils and lymphocytes in the superficial dermis.

Figure 2 Subcorneal neutrophilic pustule and edema, as well as peripheral infiltration of neutrophils and lymphocytes in the superficial dermis.

Discussion

S. pettenkoferi, a relatively new CoNS, was first identified and described in 2002 by Trulzsch et al.Citation9 The pathogene usually cause opportunistic infections (eg, peripheral or central catheter artificial heart valves) and nosocomial infections, or influence people with compromised immune systems. The virulence of S. pettenkoferi was confirmed by using a zebrafish model.Citation10 S. pettenkoferi can persist in the human body using macrophages as bacterial reservoirs.Citation10 To the best of our knowledge, AGEP associated with S. pettenkoferi has not been reported yet.

AGEP is classified as T cell-associated sterile neutrophil inflammatory response (IV type).Citation11 T cells and cytotoxic proteins such as granase B perforin induce apoptosis of the keratinocytes and the formation of subcorneal vesicles.Citation12 Specific T cells overproduce chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 8 (CXCL8)/IL-8 in AGEP patients, which is a powerful neutrophil chemokine and plays a key role in pustular formation.Citation13 Mutations in the IL-36RN gene, encoding the interleukin-36 receptor antagonist (IL-36RA), appear to be more associated with drug-induce AGEP.Citation14–16 IL-17, IL-22 and GM-CSF are also involved in maintaining strong neutrophil activity in AGEP,Citation17 which are novel potential therapeutic targets for AGEP.

The mechanism of infection as a cause of AGEP is not completely clear, it is generally believed that changes in cytokine storms caused by infection in many ways are similar to those caused by drugs.Citation8 For example, in a case of AGEP associated with Coccidioides infection, it was proposed that both Coccidioides infection and AGEP showed similar changes in cytokines dominated by Th1 inflammation.Citation18 S. pettenkoferi is a relatively rare CoNS, the clinical significance and epidemiology of S. pettenkoferi are still not sufficient. Studies of other CoNS showed that they can induce the expression of IL-6, IL-8 and other cytokines in animals.Citation19,Citation20 Infection-mediated transient immune changes set the stage for loss of antigen tolerance and the development of reversible delayed hypersensitivity reactions.Citation21

AGEP is generally self-limiting with a favorable prognosis. Treatment for drug-induced AGEP is based on removal of the triggering agents, topical steroid administration and/or systemic corticosteroids administration in severe cases.Citation3 The significance of systemic corticosteroid administration in shortening the course of the disease is controversial.Citation22 Supportive care, specifically infection prevention, is crucial when pustules begin to coalesce and large sheets of skin desquamate. In some cases of infection-associated AGEP with clear laboratory evidence, aggressive anti-infective therapy is considered necessary.Citation18 Over the past few years, it was highlighted the prominent role of IL-17 in the pathogenesis of AGEP.Citation17,Citation23 Secukinumab has promising outcome for the AGEP patients resistant to hormone therapy.Citation24 It was reported that IL22 has been reported to play a major role in AGEP, providing a new perspective for further exploration of its mechanism and new therapies.Citation25

Conclusions

In this report, we presented a case of AGEP associated with S. pettenkoferi. The characteristics, etiological mechanism and therapy of AGEP are briefly reviewed.

Ethical Concerns

The patient’s mother signed the informed consent. They agreed to publish the details of this case. Institutional approval has been obtained.

Disclosure

The authors do not have any conflicts of interest to declare in this work.

References

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