Oropharyngolaryngeal manifestations in severe toxic epidermal necrolysis: a single‐center's retrospective case series

Author:

Glasson Nicolas1ORCID,De Sandre Cécile1,Pantet Olivier2,Reinhard Antoine1,Lambercy Karma1,Sandu Kishore1,Gorostidi François1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology‐Head and Neck Surgery CHUV Lausanne Switzerland

2. Department of Adult Intensive Care CHUV Lausanne Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundToxic epidermal necrolysis is a rare and life‐threatening mucocutaneous disease. Although mucosal ear, nose, and throat (ENT) involvement is common, little is known about the characteristics, treatment modalities, and outcomes of these lesions. The aim of this study was to evaluate ENT mucosal lesions in severe toxic epidermal necrolysis patients and analyze their characteristics, treatment modalities, and outcomes, as well as proposing a management algorithm to prevent long‐term debilitating sequalae of these lesions.MethodsThis is a retrospective review of toxic epidermal necrolysis cases treated at the tertiary burns unit of the Lausanne University Hospital CHUV, Switzerland, between 2006 and 2019.ResultsOut of 19 patients with severe toxic epidermal necrolysis, 17 (89%) underwent a complete ENT examination at admission and 14 (82%) had ENT mucosal involvement. Five (26.3%) patients died during the stay in the intensive care unit. Of the 16 patients who received maximal care, 13 (81%) required orotracheal intubation for a median time of 16 (IQR: 14) days. Out of the 14 patients who survived, four (29%) had long‐term ENT complications consisting of synechiaes necessitating subsequent endoscopic procedures. Those four patients all required mechanical ventilation with an orotracheal tube and suffered from hypopharyngeal synechiaes as well as oral and endonasal synechiaes in individual cases.ConclusionThis study suggests a high prevalence of ENT synechiaes in patients with severe toxic epidermal necrolysis and requiring orotracheal intubation. Periodic ENT examination could prevent mature synechiae formation in these patients. We propose an algorithm to prevent long‐term sequalae in ENT mucosal involvement.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Dermatology

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