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Myelodysplasia cutis and VEXAS syndrome initially diagnosed as histiocytoid Sweet syndrome: A diagnostic pitfall.

Serena J E ShimshakSion JasmineMark D P DavisEmma F JohnsonMargot S PetersGang ZhengOlayemi SokumbiNneka I Comfere
Published in: Journal of cutaneous pathology (2024)
Histiocytoid Sweet syndrome (H-SS) is a histopathological variant of Sweet syndrome (SS) defined by cutaneous infiltration of immature myeloid cells morphologically resembling histiocytes. The association of H-SS with underlying malignancy, particularly myelodysplastic syndromes, is well-established. Myelodysplasia cutis (MDS-cutis) has been proposed to describe cases historically diagnosed as H-SS but characterized by shared clonality of the myeloid infiltrate in skin and bone marrow. Therefore, identifying patients who might have MDS-cutis is critical for the management of the associated hematologic malignancy. VEXAS syndrome, an adult-onset autoinflammatory disease, should also be included in the histopathologic differential diagnosis of H-SS, as it shares clinical and pathologic features with MDS-cutis. Through the presentation of two cases, we aim to highlight the defining features and key clinical implications of MDS-cutis and VEXAS syndrome.
Keyphrases
  • bone marrow
  • case report
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • acute myeloid leukemia
  • lymph node
  • immune response
  • rectal cancer
  • signaling pathway
  • soft tissue
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress