ARTICLE
Pegylated interferon alfa is a pegylated formulation
of recombinant human interferon alpha[IFN-alpha] conjugated with molecules
of polyethylene-glycol (PEG). The major advantages of this formulation,
compared to standard, nonpegylated, IFN-alpha, are a prolonged half-life
which allow for once-weekly injection and high and stable serum concentrations
of the molecule. During the course of HIV infection, the antiviral efficacy
of PEG-IFN-alpha2b in terms of reducing the plasma virus load and modification
of the patient's immune status is currently being evaluated in open, prospective
pilot studies in patients with or without ongoing antiretroviral therapy
[1].
To the best of our knowledge, we describe herein the first observation
of cutaneous necrosis at the sites of PEG-IFN injection in an HIV-infected
patient. We review the literature on previously reported cases of cutaneous
necrosis following standard or pegylated IFN-alpha injection and discuss
the different pathophysiological mechanisms that might be involved.
Case report
A 50-year-old man was followed for HIV infection, diagnosed in September
1996 and treated since that time with antiretroviral bitherapy combining
zidovudine and didanosine. Otherwise, his prior medical history was unremarkable.
In March 1999, his CD4+ lymphocyte count was 564 cells/mm3
with a T4/T8 ratio of 1.2 and virus load was 10,702 copies/ml, i.e.,
4 log/ml (Amplicor HIV 1, Monitor Roche).
Once-weekly subcutaneous injections of PEG-IFN-alpha2b (ViraferonPeg,
Schering-Plough) were started at a dose of 1.5 mug/kg. Nine months later,
the patient noted the appearance of an indurated, painful, erythematous
plaque overlying the usual area of injection on the right side of the
abdomen. One week later, a painful black escarotic lesion developed at
the center of the plaque and expanded progressively. The patient continued
to inject himself at the same site, alternating with the left side of
the abdomen. One month later, the same cutaneous lesion appeared on the
left side of the abdomen, again overlying the injection zone. He continued
to inject the product at the same sites over the next 3 months, while
the cutaneous lesions continued to expand progressively and were accompanied
by severe pain of the abdominal wall muscles.
At admission, the patient had a temperature of 38° C, and 2 inflammatory
plaques on the abdomen, about 40 mm in diameter, symmetrically situated
on either side of the navel (Fig.
1A). The lesions were poorly delimited, indurated, painful and infiltrated
at palpation with a central necrotic zone (Fig.
1B). Removal of the black eschars revealed deep atonic ulcerations
with fibrinous and purulent contents. Histological examination of a specimen
taken from the edge of one of the lesions showed superficial and deep
lymphocytic and neutrophilic infiltrates of the dermis. Septal and lobular
inflammatory lesions of the hypodermis including lymphocytic and neutrophilic
wall-infiltration of venule without vasculitis were also noted (Fig.
2). Blood and bacteriological tissue, mycobacterial, parasitic and
mycological cultures were negative. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate
was elevated, 104 mm/1st h; C-reactive protein was 8 times the normal.
The complete blood count, calcemia, serum phosphate, uremia and creatininemia
were normal. Hepatitis C virus serology was negative and HBs antigen was
not detected. His CD4+ lymphocyte count was 501/mm3
with a T4/T8 ratio of 2.8 and virus load was 20 copies/ml, i.e.,
1.3 log/ml. Lupus coagulant was detected without anticardiolipin or anti-beta2-glycoprotein
1 antibodies. The levels of prothrombin, coagulation factors, protein
C, protein S, antithrombin III, plasma homocysteine, and resistance to
activated protein C were normal. Polymorphism 20210 of the factor II gene
was normal. The search for an anomaly of fibrinolysis, cryoglobulinemia
or cryofibrinogenemia was negative. A computed tomography scan detected
a discreet heterogeneous densification of abdominal fat without involvement
of the underlying muscle wall.
The lesions resolved slowly over the next 2 months with local treatment
that combined antibiotic-containing gauze and hydrocolloid bandages and
gave rise to hypopigmented and atrophic scar tissue. PEG-IFN-alpha2b continued
to be injected subcutaneously into the thigh, without interruption or
dose modification. Since changing the injection site, no new cutaneous
lesions, at the injection site or elsewhere, have been observed.
Discussion
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first documented case of cutaneous
necroses associated with PEG-IFN injections in an HIV-infected patient.
Other potential causes of cutaneous necrosis could easily be eliminated
for our patient: protein C or S deficiency, calciphylaxis (vascular calcification-cutaneous
necrosis syndrome), cryoglobulinemia, cryofibrinogenemia. Furthermore,
the clinical picture differed from those of the rare cases of widespread
cutaneous necrosis associated with antiphospholipid syndrome [2]. The
possibility of ecthyma gangrenosum, necrotizing fasciitis or an infectious
pathology of bacterial, mycobacterial, fungal or parasitic origin was
eliminated by appropriate cultures of skin biopsies.
PEG-IFN alpha-2b is a pegylated formulation of recombinant human IFN-alpha2b
conjugated with monomethoxy polyethylene-glycol. The major advantage of
this formulation, compared to nonpegylated IFN-alpha2b, is a ten-fold
prolonged half-life (40 hrs vs 4 hrs) by reducing renal clearance,
which allows for once-weekly injection. Its antiviral efficacy in association
with ribavirin as a new standard treatment of chronic hepatitis C has
been recently documented [3, 4]. During the course of HIV infection, preliminary
results in open, prospective pilot studies in patients showed a significant
antiretroviral activity in addition to a suboptimal antiretroviral therapy
[1]. The most commonly reported adverse events of PEG-IFN in clinical
trials are similar to standard IFN: asthenia, headache, flu-like symptoms,
myalgia and fatigue/malaise. Inflammation without serious reactions at
the site of injections has been noted in approximately 40-45%. Only one
previous report described multiple cutaneous ulcerations occurring at
the site of injection of PEG-IFN-alpha associated with visual disturbances
in a patient with malignant melanoma [5].
Our observation can be added to the previously reported cases of cutaneous
necrosis following standard IFN-alpha injection [6-22]. These cutaneous
necroses occur without age or sex predominance and regardless of whether
the IFN injections were given subcutaneously or intramuscularly [11].
Although most frequently reported to arise on the abdominal wall and the
anterior surfaces of the thighs, they can also been seen overlying the
deltoid or triceps when these are the sites of injection [14]. Among the
various diseases treated, Kaposi's sarcoma during acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome, chronic hepatitis C, hairy-cell leukemia, chronic myeloid leukemia,
renal carcinoma, none is significantly associated with cutaneous necroses.
The delay to the appearance of the lesions is most often 2-3 months after
the onset of treatment, but can vary from several weeks to years [13,
17]. It is not usually correlated to the dose or frequency of administration.
According to the typical clinical presentation, the lesion appears
1-2 days after injection, but sometimes more than 1 month later. Only
the first report mentioned the appearance of cutaneous necrosis within
several hours following injection [6]. The skin lesion starts at the injection
site as an erythematous or orange-colored painful macule or nodule, that
becomes necrotic within several days. The necrosis spreads progressively
and forms a dry, black escarotic plaque with irregular borders, often
angular and well defined. The size of the ulcerations varies from several
millimeters to 10 cm in diameter. The edge of the ulceration is comprised
of a large inflammatory plaque, infiltrated on palpation, poorly delimited.
Removal of the scab reveals an atonic ulceration. The lesions can be multiple.
Resolution under treatment is slow, taking several months and giving rise
to a hyperpigmented and atrophic scar. Histological examination of skin
biopsied at the edge of the ulceration showed neutrophilic, lymphocytic
and histiocytic infiltration of the superficial and deep dermis, sometimes
associated with lobular panniculitis. Venular thromboses in the deep dermis
and subcutis can be seen but usually a deep biopsy, sometimes of the center
of the ulceration, is required. No histological vasculitic lesion is reported
to be associated in most cases. Rare bacterial secondary infections with
Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa have been noted [14].
Medical treatment is mostly based on the application of hydrocolloid bandages
to hasten healing, associated with local and systemic antibiotics in rare
cases of infection. It is sometimes necessary to resort to surgical debridement
and excision of the lesion followed by direct suturing or grafting. Continuation
of IFN injections far from the site of necrosis is possible for most patients,
but can be complicated by the appearance of new cutaneous necroses at
the new injection sites which necessitate discontinuation of the drug
[15]. Prevention requires competent training in self injection, with as
much variation as possible of the injection site, and particular vigilance
in cases of erythema which shows persistance for several days at the injection
site.
Several pathogenic mechanisms may be involved
in IFN-alpha-induced cutaneous necroses (Table
I). In our observation, the detection of lupus anticoagulant that
might be associated with HIV disease or induced by IFN treatment could
have played a favoring or aggravating role. Moreover, because of clinical
similarities with drug-induced necroses such as heparin and warfarin,
the development of cutaneous necroses associated with IFN therapy requires
a complete hemostasis work-up, including laboratory tests for factors
of congenital or acquired thrombophilia with, in particular, dosages of
proteins C and S, and the search for an antiphospholipid-anti-beta2-glycoprotein
1 syndrome. A local vasospastic effect due to direct IFN-alpha toxicity
on the vascular endothelium is another possibility. The action could be
facilitated by the increased local concentration of IFN attributable to
the repeated injections at the same site and the pharmacokinetics of the
PEG-IFN formulation. Continued administration of the injections into inflammatory
or periulcerated areas constitutes a frequently mentioned triggering or
aggravating factor [9, 10]. This hypothesis of a direct vasospastic effect
of IFN-alpha could account for the previously reported cases of IFN-induced
Raynaud's syndrome [23, 24] or severe visceral ischemic manifestations
[25], and supports the preventive proscription of the drugs favoring arteriolar
vasospasms, such as beta-blockers or dihydroergotamine.
Article accepted on 10/9/01
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