Clonal T-cell populations in pityriasis lichenoides et varioliformis acuta (Mucha-Habermann disease)
Abstract
Patients with the skin disorder pityriasis lichenoides et varioliformis acute (PLEVA) develop recurrent, self-healing papulonecrotic lesions that contain infiltrates of cytologically and antigenically normal T lymphocytes. DNA extracted from the lesions of 3 patients with PLEVA was analyzed for rearrangement of β-T-cell receptor genes for the purpose of assessing the clonality of T lymphocytes within the tissues of this disease. Lesions from all 3 cases showed clonal gene rearrangements. In each of 2 cases from which two separate lesions were biopsied, identical rearrangements were found in specimens from both sites. DNA from a variety of inflammatory lesions obtained from patients with other types of skin diseases failed to show detectable rearrangements of β-T-cell receptor genes. These results suggest that PLEVA represents a T-cell lymphoproliferative process, rather than an inflammatory disorder, as had been previously thought.
Publication Title
American Journal of Pathology
Recommended Citation
Weiss, L., Wood, G., Ellisen, L., Reynolds, T., & Sklar, J. (1987). Clonal T-cell populations in pityriasis lichenoides et varioliformis acuta (Mucha-Habermann disease). American Journal of Pathology, 126 (3), 417-421. Retrieved from https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/facpubs/18480