Case Reports in Dermatology (Oct 2024)

DRESS Syndrome That Resembles Graft-Versus-Host Disease after Chemotherapy in a Pediatric Patient: A Case Report

  • Marian Rolón,
  • Mateo Barros,
  • Clara Ortiz,
  • Sergio Danilo Cruz Romero,
  • Johanna Álvarez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000541046
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 221 – 225

Abstract

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Introduction: Drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) syndrome is a potentially life-threatening, drug-induced adverse reaction characterized by skin eruptions, lymphadenopathy, fever, and a broad range of other bodily manifestations. The spectrum of histopathologic and clinical presentations is wide; therefore, DRESS syndrome can mimic other diseases. Case Presentation: We present a case of a 4-year-old male patient who started chemotherapy with vincristine, cytarabine, and etoposide. The first clinical signs were fever, hemodynamic in-stability, and maculopapular erythema. Biopsies of skin lesions were taken, and hyperkeratosis, focal parakeratosis, acanthosis with slight spongiosis, and intraepithelial dyskeratotic cells were observed. There was a perivascular lymphoid infiltrate with abundant eosinophils in the dermis, and eosinophil permeations to the acrosyringium and epithelium were found. Conclusion: DRESS syndrome is a drug-induced reaction that shares histopathological findings in skin biopsies with those seen in graft-versus-host disease. Although the histological findings are non-pathognomonic, they were characteristic enough to be of importance in the differential diagnosis.

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