Korean J Dermatol.
1996 Feb;34(1):93-101.
A Clinical Study of chronic Cutaneous GVHD
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Dermatology, Catholic University Medical College, Seoul, Korea.
- 2Department of Internal Medicine, Catholic University Medical College, Seoul, Korea.
Abstract
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BACKGROUND: With progressive improvement in the fraction of long-term surviviors, chronic GVHD has emerged as a increasingly frequent complication of allogenic bone marrow transplantation. Except for a few case reports, there has been no clinical study of chronic cutaneous GVHD in Korea so far.
OBJECTIVE
In the present study we planned to investigate the clinical characteristics of chronic cutaneous GVHD and to compare the clinical manifestation and incidence of chronic cutaneous GVHD in Korea with previous reports in U.S.A. and Europe.
METHODS
On the basis of the patients' charts and the records of bone marrow transplantation, we investigated the incidence of chronic cutaneous GVHD in Korean leukemia patients and studied the clinical manifestations of chronic cutaneous GVHD ocurring in 16 patients whose diagnosis was confirmed by histopathologic findings of skin biopsy. We also analysed whether total body irrdiation before bone marrow transplantation, GVHD prophylaxis and presence of preceding acute GVHD affected chronic cutaneous GVHD.
RESULTS
1. The incidence in chronic cutaneous GVHD in Korea was lower than that in Caucasian countries. 2. The onset was milder than that in Caucasians. 3. The clinical manifestation was earlier than that in Caucasians. 4. The relationship between the GVHD prophylaxis and incidence chronic cutaneous GVHD was not significant. 5. The incidence of chronic cutaneous GVHD in the presence of preceding acute GVHD was higher than in cases with no preceding acute GVHD.
CONCLUSION
We speculate that the low incidence of chronic cutaneous GVHD and clinical characteristics differing from the reports in the U.S.A. and Europe might be unassociated with irradiation, GVHD prophylaxis or the presence of preceding acute GVHD but maybe related to differences in genetic background.