학술논문

Dermatologic manifestations in paediatric neurofibromatosis type 2: a cross sectional descriptive multicentric study.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases. 6/21/2022, Vol. 17 Issue 1, p1-8. 8p.
Subject
*NEUROFIBROMATOSIS 2
*ACOUSTIC neuroma
*CHILD patients
*CASTLEMAN'S disease
*CUTANEOUS manifestations of general diseases
*MACULES
*RESEARCH
*NEUROLOGICAL disorders
*CROSS-sectional method
*RESEARCH methodology
*SCHWANNOMAS
*EVALUATION research
*SKIN tumors
*COMPARATIVE studies
*NEUROFIBROMATOSIS 1
*CAFE-au-Lait spots (Disease)
*DISEASE complications
Language
ISSN
1750-1172
Abstract
Background: Neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) is characterized by bilateral vestibular schwannoma (VS) more often in adults but a severe paediatric form with multiple neurological tumours is also described. In this population, a early diagnosis is important to prevent the onset of neurological complications but is difficult, particularly without a familial history. Cutaneous manifestations, which may precede VS or neurological tumours by several years, may contribute to an early diagnosis, but specific studies are lacking. The objective of this study was to characterize cutaneous manifestations of NF2 in a paediatric population.Results: This observational, descriptive and multicentric study was conducted from April 2019 to April 2020 in seven academic French hospitals. We included patients ≤ 18 years old who fulfilled the Manchester diagnostic criteria or had a pathogenic mutation identified in the NF2 gene. All patients underwent a dermatological examination guided by a standardized questionnaire. 21 children were included, of whom 20 had at least one skin tumour (mean number 5 ± 4.6 [range 0-15]), which led to a diagnosis in four cases. In the other 17 cases, the diagnosis of NF2 was based on neurosensory complications (n = 10), family screening (n = 4) or ocular signs (n = 3). Before the NF2 diagnosis, 15 children had at least one "undiagnosed" cutaneous tumour that did not lead to a specific management. Patients' dermatological examination also revealed < 6 non specific café au lait macules (n = 15), hypopigmented macules (n = 12) with more than 3 lesions in 4 cases, and purple reticulated macules of the trunk (n = 4).Conclusion: Dermatological lesions are frequent and early in children with NF2 but rarely lead to the diagnosis. Cutaneous schwannomas are the most frequent but are often underdiagnosed. Café au lait macules are frequent, but atypical and mostly in small numbers. Multiple hypopigmented macules seem suggestive although inconsistent. The sensitivity of reticulated capillary malformation-like lesions remains to be assessed by further studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]