Affiliation:
1. Graduate School of Business Administration Keio University Kanagawa Japan
2. Department of Dermatology Self‐Defense Forces Central Hospital Tokyo Japan
3. Department of Human Genetics, Graduate School of Medicine The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan
4. Department of Psychiatry Self‐Defense Forces Central Hospital Tokyo Japan
5. Division of Dermatology, Graduate School of Medicine Kobe University Hyogo Japan
Abstract
AbstractAcral peeling skin syndrome (APSS; MIM 609796) is a rare genodermatosis characterized by painless focal cutaneous exfoliation of the dorsal hands and feet, typically displaying autosomal recessive inheritance. While cases associated with a founder mutation in TGM5 are relatively common in European Caucasian populations, no APSS cases have been reported from Japan or other East Asian countries. In contrast, Nagashima‐type palmoplantar keratosis (NPPK; MIM 615598), caused by variants in SERPINB7, is relatively common in East Asia due to founder mutations. We describe a 27‐year‐old Japanese woman with spontaneous focal cutaneous exfoliation of the dorsal hand following prolonged glove use, indicative of APSS. Histopathological examination revealed a cleft between the stratum corneum and stratum granulosum and within the horny layer of the epidermis, supporting this diagnosis. However, her mother and maternal uncle exhibited similar symptoms, and there was no reported consanguinity in the patient's parents or grandparents, prompting suspicion of an autosomal dominant genodermatosis. Whole‐genome sequencing (WGS) revealed compound heterozygous variants in TGM5 (c.1037G>A and c.684 + 1G>A) as suspected causative variants in the patient, leading to an APSS diagnosis, the first reported in East Asia. On the other hand, her mother and maternal uncle were diagnosed with NPPK due to compound heterozygous pathogenic variants in SERPINB7 (c.796C>T and c.455‐1G>A). This case highlights the complexity of diagnosing skin disorders when multiple genodermatoses with similar phenotypes exist within a pedigree. Comprehensive genetic analyses, such as whole‐exome sequencing and WGS, are invaluable for identifying causative variants in such complex cases.