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"Pittelkow, Mark R."
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Acral Melanoma and Mechanical Stress on the Plantar Surface of the Foot
2017
A Mayo Clinic analysis of melanoma distribution showed a high frequency of lesions on the heel and fewer lesions on the front of the foot than shown in a Japanese study that indicated that melanomas may be most common in weight-bearing areas of the plantar surface.
Journal Article
Survival, Risk Factors, and Effect of Treatment in 101 Patients With Calciphylaxis
by
Williams, Amy W.
,
Weaver, Amy L.
,
McCarthy-Fruin, Kathleen A.M.
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
2016
To report on the survival and the associations of treatments upon survival of patients with calciphylaxis seen at a single center.
Using the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision diagnosis code of 275.49 and the keyword “calciphylaxis” in the dismissal narrative, we retrospectively identified 101 patients with calciphylaxis seen at our institution between January 1, 1999, through September 20, 2014, using a predefined, consensus-developed classification scheme.
The average age of patients was 60 years: 81 (80.2%) were women; 68 (68.0%) were obese; 19 (18.8%) had stage 0 to 2 chronic kidney disease (CKD), 19 (18.9%) had stage 3 or 4 CKD; 63 (62.4%) had stage 5 or 5D (dialysis) CKD. Seventy-five patients died during follow-up. Six-month survival was 57%. Lack of surgical debridement was associated with insignificantly lower 6-month survival (hazard ratio [HR]=1.99; 95% CI, 0.96-4.15; P=.07) and significantly poorer survival for the entire duration of follow-up (HR=1.98; 95% CI, 1.15-3.41; P=.01), which was most pronounced in stage 5 or 5D CKD (HR=1.91; 95% CI, 1.03-3.56; P=.04). Among patients with stage 5/5D CKD, subtotal parathyroidectomy (performed only in patients with hyperparathyroidism) was associated with better 6-month (HR=0.12; 95% CI, 0.02-0.90; P=.04) and overall survival (HR= 0.37; 95% CI, 0.15-0.87; P=.02).
Calciphylaxis is associated with a high mortality rate. Significantly effective treatments included surgical debridement and subtotal parathyroidectomy in patients with stage 5/5D CKD with hyperparathyroidism. Treatments with tissue-plasminogen activator, sodium thiosulfate, and hyperbaric oxygen therapy were not associated with higher mortality.
Journal Article
Adrenergic and Cholinergic Control in the Biology of Epidermis: Physiological and Clinical Significance
by
Grando, Sergei A.
,
Schallreuter, Karin U.
,
Pittelkow, Mark R.
in
Animals
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Dermatology
2006
The presence of an autocrine adrenergic and cholinergic intra/intercellular signal transduction network in the human epidermis contributes significantly to homeostatic and compensatory responses regulating vital functions in keratinocytes and melanocytes. The ligands produced control autocrine and paracrine loops to initiate responses through cognate receptors expressed within the same or adjacent cells. The epidermal adrenergic signal controls calcium homeostasis, cell growth, differentiation, motility, and pigmentation via the β2 and α1 adrenoceptors. The cholinergic system is highly complex comprising both nicotinic and muscarinic receptors with multiple subtypes and this system plays an important role in keratinocyte cell cycle progression, differentiation, directional migration, adhesion, and apoptotic secretion. Moreover, lymphocytes also express adrenergic and cholinergic receptors. Both types of signal transduction receptors are coupled to classical intracellular second messenger pathways, including cAMP-, cGMP-, and calcium-mediated downstream responses. To date, it has been recognized that several dermatoses such as psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, Mal de Meleda, vitiligo, palmoplantar pustulosis, and pemphigus may be mediated, in part, by the non-neuronal adrenergic/cholinergic systems. A detailed understanding of the physiology and pathophysiology of the adrenergic/cholinergic network in the skin could offer the development of specific drugs for novel treatment modalities.
Journal Article
Genome-Wide Expression Profiling of Five Mouse Models Identifies Similarities and Differences with Human Psoriasis
2011
Development of a suitable mouse model would facilitate the investigation of pathomechanisms underlying human psoriasis and would also assist in development of therapeutic treatments. However, while many psoriasis mouse models have been proposed, no single model recapitulates all features of the human disease, and standardized validation criteria for psoriasis mouse models have not been widely applied. In this study, whole-genome transcriptional profiling is used to compare gene expression patterns manifested by human psoriatic skin lesions with those that occur in five psoriasis mouse models (K5-Tie2, imiquimod, K14-AREG, K5-Stat3C and K5-TGFbeta1). While the cutaneous gene expression profiles associated with each mouse phenotype exhibited statistically significant similarity to the expression profile of psoriasis in humans, each model displayed distinctive sets of similarities and differences in comparison to human psoriasis. For all five models, correspondence to the human disease was strong with respect to genes involved in epidermal development and keratinization. Immune and inflammation-associated gene expression, in contrast, was more variable between models as compared to the human disease. These findings support the value of all five models as research tools, each with identifiable areas of convergence to and divergence from the human disease. Additionally, the approach used in this paper provides an objective and quantitative method for evaluation of proposed mouse models of psoriasis, which can be strategically applied in future studies to score strengths of mouse phenotypes relative to specific aspects of human psoriasis.
Journal Article
Rapid response of lichen planus to baricitinib associated with suppression of cytotoxic CXCL13+CD8+ T cells
by
Do, Tran H.
,
Boudreaux, Blake
,
Hughes, Alysia N.
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Azetidines - administration & dosage
2024
BACKGROUNDCutaneous lichen planus (LP) is a recalcitrant, difficult-to-treat, inflammatory skin disease characterized by pruritic, flat-topped, violaceous papules on the skin. Baricitinib is an oral Janus kinase (JAK) 1/2 inhibitor that interrupts the signaling pathway of IFN-γ, a cytokine implicated in the pathogenesis of LP.METHODSIn this phase II trial, 12 patients with cutaneous LP received 2 mg daily baricitinib for 16 weeks, accompanied by in-depth spatial, single-cell, and bulk transcriptomic profiling of pre- and posttreatment samples.RESULTSAn early and sustained clinical response was seen, with 83.3% of patients responsive at week 16. Our molecular data identified a unique, oligoclonal IFN-γ, CD8+, and CXCL13+ cytotoxic T cell population in LP skin and demonstrated a rapid decrease in IFN signature within 2 weeks of treatment, most prominently in the basal layer of the epidermis.CONCLUSIONThis study demonstrates the efficacy and molecular mechanisms of JAK inhibition in LP.TRIAL REGISTRATIONNCT05188521FUNDINGEli Lilly, Appignani Benefactor Funds, 5P30AR075043, Mayo Clinic Clinical Trials Stimulus Funds.
Journal Article
Malignant Melanoma in the 21st Century, Part 1: Epidemiology, Risk Factors, Screening, Prevention, and Diagnosis
2007
Malignant melanoma is an aggressive, therapy-resistant malignancy of melanocytes. The incidence of melanoma has been steadily increasing worldwide, resulting in an increasing public health problem. Exposure to solar UV radiation, fair skin, dysplastic nevi syndrome, and a family history of melanoma are major risk factors for melanoma development. The interactions between genetic and environmental risk factors that promote melanomagenesis are currently the subject of ongoing research. Avoidance of UV radiation and surveillance of high-risk patients have the potential to reduce the population burden of melanoma. Biopsies of the primary tumor and sampling of draining lymph nodes are required for optimal diagnosis and staging. Several clinically relevant pathologic subtypes have been identified and need to be recognized. Therapy for early disease is predominantly surgical, with a minor benefit noted with the use of adjuvant therapy. Management of systemic melanoma is a challenge because of a paucity of active treatment modalities. In the first part of this 2-part review, we discuss epidemiology, risk factors, screening, prevention, and diagnosis of malignant melanoma. Part 2 (which will appear in the April 2007 issue) will review melanoma staging, prognosis, and treatment.
Journal Article
Pemphigus Vulgaris Autoantibody Profiling by Proteomic Technique
by
Chernyavsky, Alex I.
,
Grando, Sergei A.
,
Felgner, Philip L.
in
Antibodies
,
Antibody Specificity
,
Antigens
2013
Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) is a mucocutaneous blistering disease characterized by IgG autoantibodies against the stratified squamous epithelium. Current understanding of PV pathophysiology does not explain the mechanism of acantholysis in patients lacking desmoglein antibodies, which justifies a search for novel targets of pemphigus autoimmunity. We tested 264 pemphigus and 138 normal control sera on the multiplexed protein array platform containing 701 human genes encompassing many known keratinocyte cell-surface molecules and members of protein families targeted by organ-non-specific PV antibodies. The top 10 antigens recognized by the majority of test patients' sera were proteins encoded by the DSC1, DSC3, ATP2C1, PKP3, CHRM3, COL21A1, ANXA8L1, CD88 and CHRNE genes. The most common combinations of target antigens included at least one of the adhesion molecules DSC1, DSC3 or PKP3 and/or the acetylcholine receptor CHRM3 or CHRNE with or without the MHC class II antigen DRA. To identify the PV antibodies most specific to the disease process, we sorted the data based on the ratio of patient to control frequencies of antigen recognition. The frequency of antigen recognition by patients that exceeded that of control by 10 and more times were the molecules encoded by the CD33, GP1BA, CHRND, SLC36A4, CD1B, CD32, CDH8, CDH9, PMP22 and HLA-E genes as well as mitochondrial proteins encoded by the NDUFS1, CYB5B, SOD2, PDHA1 and FH genes. The highest specificity to PV showed combinations of autoantibodies to the calcium pump encoded by ATP2C1 with C5a receptor plus DSC1 or DSC3 or HLA-DRA. The results identified new targets of pemphigus autoimmunity. Novel autoantibody signatures may help explain individual variations in disease severity and treatment response, and serve as sensitive and specific biomarkers for new diagnostic assays in PV patients.
Journal Article
Thyroid Ophthalmopathy, Dermopathy, and Acropachy
2016
A 56-year-old man was referred to a dermatologist for assessment of the progression of his thyroid dermopathy. Three years earlier, he had received a diagnosis of Graves’ disease with thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy and dermopathy.
A 56-year-old man was referred to a dermatologist for assessment of the progression of his thyroid dermopathy. Three years earlier he had received a diagnosis of Graves’ disease with thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy and dermopathy. He was treated with radioactive iodine ablation. Photographs taken 1 year after treatment showed proptosis (Panel A) and pretibial myxedema (Panel B). Shortly thereafter he underwent orbital decompression in both eyes. At the time of the current presentation, his physical examination showed progression of the dermopathy, which was functionally limiting and resembled elephantiasis (Panel C). In addition, his hands were enlarged and coarsened, and his fingers had . . .
Journal Article
Malignant Melanoma in the 21st Century, Part 1: Epidemiology, Risk Factors, Screening, Prevention, and Diagnosis
by
Weenig, Roger H.
,
Pulido, Jose S.
,
Markovic, Svetomir N.
in
Biological and medical sciences
,
Causes of
,
Dermatology
2007
Malignant melanoma is an aggressive, therapy-resistant malignancy of melanocytes. The incidence of melanoma has been steadily increasing worldwide, resulting in an increasing public health problem. Exposure to solar UV radiation, fair skin, dysplastic nevi syndrome, and a family history of melanoma are major risk factors for melanoma development. The interactions between genetic and environmental risk factors that promote melanomagenesis are currently the subject of ongoing research. Avoidance of UV radiation and surveillance of high-risk patients have the potential to reduce the population burden of melanoma. Biopsies of the primary tumor and sampling of draining lymph nodes are required for optimal diagnosis and staging. Several clinically relevant pathologic subtypes have been identified and need to be recognized. Therapy for early disease is predominantly surgical, with a minor benefit noted with the use of adjuvant therapy. Management of systemic melanoma is a challenge because of a paucity of active treatment modalities. In the first part of this 2-part review, we discuss epidemiology, risk factors, screening, prevention, and diagnosis of malignant melanoma. Part 2 (which will appear in the April 2007 issue) will review melanoma staging, prognosis, and treatment.
Journal Article