Diagnostic features of pemphigus vulgaris in patients with pemphigus foliaceus: Detection of both autoantibodies, long-term follow-up and treatment responses

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Abstract

There are several studies that describe the simultaneous presence and conversion of pemphigus foliaceus into pemphigus vulgaris and vice versa. We describe eight patients with clinical, histological and immunopathological features of pemphigus foliaceus, at the time of the initial diagnosis. After a mean period of 2.5 years, additional serological features of pemphigus vulgaris were observed. During a long-term follow-up, systemic therapies, their durations and treatment outcomes were recorded. These patients did not respond to conventional systemic therapy and developed multiple side-effects from these drugs. Hence, they were treated with intravenous immunoglobulin therapy (IVIg). Prior to the initiation of IVIg therapy, different assays were performed to detect the presence of autoantibodies, including indirect immunofluorescence (IIF), immunoblot assay using bovine gingival lysate, and ELISA. Twenty-five healthy normal individuals, 12 patients with pemphigus vulgaris, and eight patients with pemphigus foliaceus served as controls for comparison of serological studies. At the time of initial diagnosis, the sera of all eight study patients also demonstrated binding on an immunoblot assay to a 160-kDa protein (desmoglein 1) only. This is typically observed in pemphigus foliaceus. Prior to staring IVIg therapy, binding was observed to both the 160 kDa and 130 kDa (desmoglein 3) proteins on an immunoblot assay which was characteristic of pemphigus vulgaris. The antidesmogleins, 1 and 3 autoantibodies, were predominantly of the IgG4 subclass in all eight patients studied. IVIg therapy induced remission in four patients and control in four of the eight patients. The total follow-up period ranged from 2.6 to 9.5 years (mean 5.3 years). It is difficult to determine the exact time at which these patients with pemphigus foliaceus developed pemphigus vulgaris. It is possible that the disease was nonresponsive to conventional immunosuppressive therapy owing to the simultaneous presence of two autoantibodies.

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Sami, N., Bhol, K. C., & Ahmed, A. R. (2001). Diagnostic features of pemphigus vulgaris in patients with pemphigus foliaceus: Detection of both autoantibodies, long-term follow-up and treatment responses. Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 125(3), 492–498. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2249.2001.01637.x

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