Clinical Case Reports (May 2024)

A case of IgA pemphigus, with a poor response to dapsone, successfully treated with adalimumab

  • Saman Al‐Zahawi,
  • Kambiz Kamyab,
  • Kamran Balighi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.8807
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Key Clinical Message IgA pemphigus is usually treated by Dapsone. Recalcitrant cases may be treated by Colchicine, Sulfapyridine, or Acitretin. Some patients with recurrent severe disease may not respond to the aforementioned medications. Our study highlights the role of TNFa inhibitor as an alternative modality in the treatment of recalcitrant IgA pemphigus. Abstract IgA pemphigus is a rare autoimmune blistering disease characterized by a pruritic, annular, vesiculopustular eruption. In IgA pemphigus, there are IgA autoantibodies targeting the keratinocyte cell surface adhesion molecules, causing cell‐to‐cell dehiscence and a flaccid vesiculopustular eruption, mainly in the axilla and groin. Dapsone, despite being the drug of choice for treating IgA pemphigus, is not effective in clearing lesions in a minority of patients and such rare cases of recalcitrant IgA pemphigus need alternative modalities of treatment. Here, we report the successful treatment of a 50‐year‐old male patient with an adalimumab injection who had a poor response to dapsone.

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