ARTICLE
An unusual case of widespread acne unresponsive to treatment with early
onset in a child with Apert's syndrome is presented. The patient eventually
responded to oral isotretinoin therapy.
The morphological profile of the sebaceous glands and the expression
of proliferative markers and androgen receptors were evaluated in seboblasts
and sebocytes using morphological, ultrastructural and immunohistochemical
techniques.
There were no significant differences in staining for proliferative
markers and nuclear expression of androgen receptors in the glands from
the patient and four healthy controls. Our results support the view that
acne in Apert's syndrome is not sustained by abnormalities of the sebaceous
glands demonstrable with conventional morphological techniques, and that
it does not depend on an increased expression of androgen receptors.
Key words: acne, acrocephalosyndactyly, androgen receptors, Apert's
syndrome, isotretinoin.
Apert's syndrome acrocephalosyndactyly type 1 is an autosomal
dominant disease with a sporadic incidence estimated at 1 in 160,000 live
births [1]. It is characterised by syndactyly of fingers and toes and
craniofacial abnormalities as a consequence of the premature obliteration
of the craniofacial sutures [2].
Hermann et al. and Solomon et al. first reported the association
between Apert's syndrome and moderate-to-severe acne involving the face,
chest, back and forearms [3, 4].
We describe an unusual case of disseminated and unresponsive acne with
early onset in a child with Apert's syndrome and report the results of
an immunohistochemical and ultrastructural investigation of the sebaceous
glands.
Case report
In April 1997, a 7-year-old white child with Apert's syndrome was referred
to our Department for treatment of severe acne that had started at the
age of six. Pubertal maturation stage was SMR 1 using Tanner's method
(absence of pubic hair and presence of prepubertal penis and testicles).
The patient exhibited the following abnormalities typical of Apert's syndrome:
brachycephalic skull, flattened occiput, prominent forehead, retrognathia
of the upper jaw, prognathia of the lower jaw, proptosis and ocular hypertelorism.
The nose was short and broad; the hands, completely syndactylic at birth,
had been partially separated surgically into semblances of fingers. Soft-tissue
union joined all toes of both feet. Acne was prominent on the neck, chest,
shoulders and back with numerous comedones, papules and pustules. The
lesions did not improve with oral erythromycin therapy (1 g/day for 2
months) and local therapy with clindamycin phosphate, erythromycin, azelaic
acid and benzoyl peroxide.
The patient returned in January 1998: the cutaneous lesions were greatly
worsened with predominance of papules, pustules and small cysts also involving
the lower jaw (Fig. 1a). Blood sedimentation rate, anti-streptococcal
titre, reactive C protein, immunoelectrophoresis, plasma cortisol, testosterone,
androstenedione, 17-OH-progesterone, dehydroepiandrosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone
sulphate, and sex hormone-binding globulin were all normal.
The patient was started on a 24-week course of oral isotretinoin with
an initial dose of 0.5 mg/kg/day in the first 12 weeks rising to 0.8 mg/kg/day
in the remaining 12 weeks. Complete clearance of the cutaneous lesions
was observed at 20 weeks. Severe skin dryness was the only adverse effect
during treatment. After four years the patient is still free of acne (Fig.
1b).
Histopathology
Biopsies of involved and uninvolved skin were collected from the patient's
back to investigate the descriptive diagnosis of acne vulgaris and were
compared with back skin specimens from four preadolescent males in advanced
SMR1 stage without clinical signs of hormonal abnormalities, two with
and two without acne. All specimens were analyzed by light, ultrastructural
and immunohistochemical techniques. KONTRON IBAS analyser and CAS 200
were used to evaluate morphometry and nuclear immunolabelling for androgen
receptors of the sebaceous glands.
Statistical differences between obtained data were determined according
to z test, p < 0.05 was regarded as indicating statistical significance.
Histopathology showed a typical closed comedone-type acne with a morphological
aspect similar to that observed in the two control subjects affected by
acne. The morphological profile of the pilosebaceous apparatus and the
ultrastructural aspect of sebocytes were similar in the patient and the
four healthy subjects.
Immunohistochemical analysis of mature sebocytes from all specimens
showed a strong reaction for anti-EMA antibodies (DAKO-EMA, E29), but
not for anti-Ki67 (clone MIB-1, DAKO) or anti-PCNA antibodies (CLONE PC-10,
DAKO). By contrast, undifferentiated sebocytes were immunolabelled only
with anti-Ki67 and anti-PCNA antibodies. Androgen receptors were consistently
seen in nuclei of peripherally located undifferentiated sebocytes and
in some differentiating sebocytes. At morphometry, the nuclear area immunoreactive
for androgen receptors was similar in the patient and the four controls
(Fig. 2a-b).
No significant differences in nuclear androgen receptor expression between
patient and controls were evident (Table I).
Discussion
Little is known about the pathogenesis of acne in Apert's syndrome.
Several different, not mutually exclusive, hypotheses have been advanced.
Based on the prevalent involvement of trunk, arms and thighs, rather than
the face, and on the observation that the eruption is persistently monomorphic
and unresponsive to antibiotic therapy in the usual dosage range, Steffen
hypothesised that this is not true acne but rather an "acneiform eruption"
developing on an inherited abnormality of the pilosebaceous apparatus
[2, 5].
Linking acne pathogenetically to premature epiphyseal closure, which
is the basic inherited disorder of acrocephalosyndactyly, Henderson and
co-workers also hypothesised that an altered end-organ androgen metabolism
might be responsible for both disorders [6].
The results of our study confirm the lack of overexpression of androgen
receptors in the sebaceous glands reported in this syndrome [6]. Indeed,
sebocytes from the patient and the four controls exhibited a similar proportion
of positive nuclear areas. The patient's sexual hormone profile was normal.
Likewise, no increased proliferative activity of sebaceous glands was
demonstrated.
Conventional morphological techniques did not detect abnormalities in
the pilosebaceous units of the patient.
Further studies are needed to provide new insights into the mechanism
of androgen influence on sebaceous glands in Apert's syndrome.
As regards acne management in these patients, the few reports published
to date indicate oral isotretinoin as the most effective therapy [1, 7-9].
To our knowledge, this is the first time oral isotretinoin has been
used in a 7-year-old child with the syndrome and widespread acne with
complete resolution of cutaneous lesions and no recurrence at four years.
References
1. Parker TL, Roth JG, Esterly NB. Isotretinoin for acne in Apert
Syndrome. Pediatric Dermatol 1992; 9: 298-300.
2. Steffen C. The acneiform eruption of Apert's syndrome is not
acne vulgaris. Am J Dermatopathol 1984; 6: 213-20.
3. Hermann J, Pallister PD, Opitz JM. Craniosynostosis and craniosynostosis
syndromes. Rocky Mountain Med J 1969; 66: 45-56.
4. Solomon LM, Fretzin D, Pruzansky S. Pilosebaceous abnormalities
in Apert's syndrome. Arch Dermatol 1970; 102: 381-5.
5. Steffen C. Acneiform eruption in Apert's syndrome, acrocephalosyndactyly.
Arch Dermatol 1982; 118: 206-8.
6. Henderson CA, Knaggs H, Clark A, Highet AS, Cunliffe WJ. Apert's
syndrome and androgen receptor staining of the basal cells of sebaceous
glands. Br J Dermatol 1995; 132: 139-43.
7. Downs AMR, Condon CA, Tan R. Isotretinoin therapy for antibiotic-refractory
acne in Apert's syndrome. Clin Exp Dermatol 1999; 24: 461-3
8. Krunic AL, Vesic SA, Goldner B, Novak A, Clark RE. Ectrodactyly,
soft-tissue syndactyly, and nodulo-cystic acne: coincidence or association?
Ped Derm 1997; 14: 31-5.
9. Robinson D, Wilms NA. Successful treatment of the acne of
Apert syndrome with isotretinoin. J Am Acad Dermatol 1989; 21:
315-6.
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Figure 1. Severe
acne on the neck and chest (1a) in a 7-year-old boy with Apert's syndrome
and clearing of the lesions (1b) four years from treatment with oral
isotretinoin. |
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Figure 2. Immunohistochemical
detection of androgen receptors on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded
sebaceous glands. The nuclei of seboblasts and differentiating sebocytes
stain for anti-androgen receptor antibody (F39.4.1), showing a similar
proportion of positive nuclear areas in the patient (a) and
the controls (b) (original magnification x 400). |
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