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Vol. 14. Issue 3.
Pages 168-170 (May - June 2018)
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Vol. 14. Issue 3.
Pages 168-170 (May - June 2018)
Case report
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Necrotizing fasciitis in a patient receiving tocilizumab for rheumatoid arthritis – Case report
Fascitis necrosante en un paciente bajo tocilizumab para la artritis reumatoide. Presentación de un caso
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Diana Rosa-Gonçalves
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di9_goncalves@hotmail.com

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, Miguel Bernardes, Lúcia Costa
Rheumatology Department, Centro Hospitalar São João, Portugal
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Table 1. Characterization of reported cases of necrotizing fasciitis with tocilizumab and TNFα blockers.
Abstract

We present a case of necrotizing fasciitis in a 66-year-old Caucasian woman with rheumatoid arthritis receiving tocilizumab, and provide a review of published cases. The patient exhibited no systemic symptoms and discreet cutaneous inflammatory signals at presentation. She was successfully treated with broad-spectrum empiric antibiotic therapy and surgical debridement.

Keywords:
Rheumatoid arthritis
Infection
Necrotizing fasciitis
Skin
Tocilizumab
Tumor necrosis factor antagonists
Resumen

Presentamos un caso de fascitis necrosante en una mujer caucásica de 66 años de edad con artritis reumatoide en tratamiento con tocilizumab y se ha realizado una revisión de casos publicados. La paciente ha presentado falta de síntomas sistémicos y señales inflamatorias cutáneas discretas. Ha sido tratada con éxito con terapia antibiótica empírica de amplio espectro y desbridamiento quirúrgico.

Palabras clave:
Artritis reumatoide
Infección
Fascitis necrosante
Piel
Tocilizumab
Antagonistas del factor de necrosis tumoral alfa
Full Text
Background

Necrotizing fasciitis (NF) is a rare severe infection affecting subcutaneous tissue and superficial fascia associated with considerable mortality (70–80%).1–3 The infections are the most feared adverse events of tocilizumab (TOC); there are few published pos-marketing data.

A case report of NF is presented with a published cases review through PubMed database and several European Biologics Registers.

Case report

A 66-year-old Caucasian woman with a seropositive RA presented with sudden onset of severe and progressive forearm and elbow pain with 3 days of evolution. She denied fever and history of trauma or animal bite. Since fourteen years ago, she has been consecutively treated with methotrexate (up to 20mg/week), etanercept (50mg weekly) and adalimumab (40mg fortnightly), which were discontinued owing to lack of efficacy. For three years, she has been treated with prednisolone (7.5mg/day), leflunomide (LEF) (10mg/day) and TOC (8mg/kg intravenous (iv) every 4 weeks). The prior medical history was significant for bacterial osteomyelitis (foot fifth digit) under TOC monotherapy for a year. Vital signs were as follow: pulse, 86beats/min; blood pressure, 135/72mmHg; body temperature, 36.8°C. Had active synovitis in metacarpophalangeal, interphalangeal and wrist joints. Left upper limb presented diffusely oedematous with a slight erythematous rash and increased temperature. Laboratory tests were as follow: hemoglobin 12.3g/dl; white blood cell (WBC) count 11.8×109/l (neutrophils 10.6×109/l); platelets 149×109/l; C-reactive protein (CRP) 74.6mg/L; creatinine 1.51mg/dl; sodium 138mEq/l and glucose 91mg/dl. Arteriovenous Doppler ultrasound excluded venous thrombosis.

Three days later, erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 58mm and CRP 188.3mg/L. Differential diagnosis included cellulitis and septic arthritis. Immunosuppressants drugs were discontinued, cholestyramine and empiric antibiotic therapy (vancomycin and imipenem) were initiated. Magnetic resonance showed peri-aponeurosis and muscle edema (especially deltoid muscle), signs of cellulitis, without organized collections. At day 5 of treatment, lesions rapidly progressed to extensive areas of skin detachment and necrosis with severe exudation (Fig. 1). She had now periodic fever. Enterobacter aerogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia were identified in the skin; blood cultures were negative. Surgical debridement with subsequent partial skin graft and a twenty-days period of antibiotics led to progressive improvement. She was discharged at day 39.

Figure 1.

Evolution of skin lesions at first five days of internment: áreas of extensive skin detachment in the context of ruptura of blisters and severe exudation and necrotic áreas.

(0.12MB).

After one-year follow-up there was no recurrence of infections. She is under hydroxychloroquine (400mg/day) and prednisolone (7.5mg/day). Methotrexate was added but soon discontinued due to oral mucositis. TOC was permanently withdrawn.

Literature review and discussion

We identified three case reports of NF in RA patients receiving TOC3–5 and three under TNF antagonists6–8 (Table 1). Published rates of serious skin and soft tissue infections in RA patients vary widely between different European Biologics Registers, from 12–18 per 1000 patient-years in the British register to 37–76 per 1000 patient-years in German register.9 Results from British register showed that the majority were cellulitis (227/309; 73%) and only four cases were NF (all with anti-TNF).10

Table 1.

Characterization of reported cases of necrotizing fasciitis with tocilizumab and TNFα blockers.

Case (reference)  15  23  36  47  58  69 
Biological  TCZ  TCZ  TCZ  Etanercept  Infliximab  Etanercept 
Gender 
Age (years)  59  65  53  39  54  37 
RA duration (years)  15  12  21 
TNFα blockers/TCZ therapy duration (months)  12  48  24 
Current cDMARD  No  No  AZA  i.m MTX  No 
Previous DMARD  MTX, HCQ, adalimumab, etanercept  MTX, SSZ, tracolimus, infliximab, etanercept  No  SSZ, AZA, cyclosporin, i.m. gold, MTX  Gold, HCQ, SSZ, MTX, AZA, LEFL 
CCTs  No  No  Yes 
DM  No  No  No  No  No  No 
Previous infection under biologics  No  No  No  No  No  No 
Area  Pectoral region
Shoulder 
Hand, Forearm  Leg  Shoulder  Thigh  Lower limb 
Fever at apresentation  No  No  No  Yes  No  No 
WBC (/mm3Normal  5300  22,100  Normal  14,820  Normal 
Neutrophils (/mm34900  19,669  Raised  13,990 
CRP (mg/dl)  Normal  0.04  25.3  Raised 
Fasciitis in CT/MRI  Yes/not done  Not done/not done  Yes/not done  Yes/not done  Not done/not done  Not done/not done 
Isolated agents in skin swabs/blood cultures  Group A Streptococcus (pyogenes)/None  Group A Streptococcus/none  Group A Streptococcus/none  No/No  Group A Streptococcus/Group A Streptococcus  Group A Streptococcus/Group A Streptococcus 
Treatment  Gentamicin, penicillin, clindamycin, (+IVIGs+hydrocortisone)  Penicillin G, meropenem  Cefotaxime, metronidazol, vancomycin, ciprofloxacin; clindamycin, ciprofloxacin, flucloxacillin, benzylpenicillin  DIC treatment  Clindamicina, vancomicina, levofloxacina, IVIGs 
Surgical debridement/skin graft  Yes/no  Yes/no  Yes/yes  Yes/no  Yes/yes  Yes/no 
Sepsis/death  Yes/yes  Yes/no  No/no  No/no  Yes (DIC)/yes  Yes/yes 

AZA, azathioprine; cDMARD, classic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; CCT, corticotherapy; CRP, C-reactive protein; CT, computerized tomography; DIC, disseminated intravascular coagulation; DM, diabetes mellitus; F, female; HCQ, hydroxychloroquine; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulin; LEFL, leflunomide; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; M, male; MTX, methotrexate; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; SSZ, sulfasalazine; TCZ, tocilizumab; WBC, white blood cell; ?, unknown.

A German cohort study concluded that longer disease duration, history of severe infections, previous exposure to multiple DMARDs and concomitant treatments with LEF, prednisone or proton-pump inhibitor increase the risk of infections under TOC. This is our patient profile. In the TOWARD study, infections were more prevalent among patients receiving TOC and DMARDs simultaneously; however, there was no explicitly assigned association to LEF.11 Thus, we cannot overlooked that our patient was under LEF and glucocorticoids and we should attribute the adverse event to their association with TOC rather than to TOC alone. TOC contribution remains speculative and causality can neither be asserted nor ruled out with certainty. So, we believe that is important to report such infections in the post-marketing surveillance.

In conclusion, physician should keep in mind that infections may mimic a disease flare and the absence of fever does not exclude serious infections in RA patients under biologics.

Ethical disclosuresProtection of human and animals subjects

The authors state that no human or animal experiments have been performed for this investigation.

Confidentiality of data

The authors state that they have followed the protocols of their work center on the publication of patient data.

Right to privacy and informed consent

The authors declare that they have received written consent from the patients and/or subjects mentioned in the article. The author for correspondence must be in possession of this document.

Conflict of interest

All authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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Copyright © 2016. Elsevier España, S.L.U. and Sociedad Española de Reumatología y Colegio Mexicano de Reumatología
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