VEXAS syndrome: Focus on dermatological manifestations and their histopathological correlate

Author:

Engelen Sofie1ORCID,Dens Anne‐Catherine12,Staels Frederik34,Schrijvers Rik345,Blockmans Daniel56,Vanderschueren Steven56,Betrains Albrecht56,Woei‐A‐Jin F. J. Sherida H.78,Vanstapel Arno9,Bosisio Franscesca9,De Haes Petra1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatology University Hospitals Leuven Leuven Belgium

2. Department of Development and Regeneration Skeletal Biology and Engineering Research Centre Leuven Belgium

3. Allergy and Clinical Immunology Research Group, Immunology and Transplantation, Department of Microbiology KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

4. Department of Microbiology, Laboratory of Adaptive Immunology Immunology and Transplantation Leuven Belgium

5. Department of General Internal Medicine University Hospitals Leuven Leuven Belgium

6. Department of Microbiology, Laboratory of Clinical Infectious and Inflammatory Disease Immunology and Transplantation Leuven Belgium

7. Department of General Medical Oncology, Leuven Cancer Institute University Hospitals Leuven Leuven Belgium

8. Department of Oncology Laboratory of Experimental Oncology Leuven Belgium

9. Department of Histopathology University Hospitals Leuven Leuven Belgium

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundVEXAS ‘Vacuoles, E1 Enzyme, X‐linked, Autoinflammatory, Somatic syndrome’ is a rare autoinflammatory syndrome, first described in October 2020 by Beck et al. It is caused by somatic mutations in the UBA1 gene, coding for the E1 enzyme, responsible for ubiquitination. It manifests in adulthood, mainly in men, with constitutional symptoms, haematological abnormalities and often skin lesions with neutrophilic dermatoses most frequently reported. Since skin lesions are a frequent and early manifestation, recognising these may prove very useful for diagnosis.ObjectivesTo focus on the dermatological manifestations of VEXAS and their histopathological correlate.MethodsWe retrospectively collected data and revised skin biopsies of VEXAS patients diagnosed in our tertiary care centre, and compared those with the literature.ResultsWe identified nine men between 62 and 84 years old. The most frequently encountered UBA1 mutation was p.Met41Thr. Skin manifestations occurred in all patients; mostly as erythematous to purpuric papules/plaques, often with annular pattern. Histopathological, early VEXAS lesions showed a gradient in infiltrate with neutrophils being concentrated in the superficial interstitium and lymphocytes situated deeper around the blood vessels. Later in the disease course, the pattern became more variable and less specific with more nuclear debris, histiocytes, neutrophils and ulceration. Haematological and constitutional manifestations were present in all patients, followed by musculoskeletal (88.8%), eye (77.7%) and cardiovascular manifestations (66.6%). Polychondritis was present in 6/9 (66.6%) patients, as were respiratory symptoms, though only 33.3% had proven lung disease. The mortality rate was 22% 10 months after diagnosis.ConclusionsThis is the first cohort which describes in detail VEXAS skin manifestations with revision of all available skin biopsies, which led to the conclusion that early histopathological abnormalities in VEXAS syndrome may be easy to recognise, while the histopathological image becomes less specific over time and mimics other diseases as VEXAS progresses.

Publisher

Wiley

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