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Lobular panniculitis at the site of glatiramer acetate injections for the treatment of relapsing‐remitting multiple sclerosis. A report of two cases
Author(s) -
Ball Nigel J.,
Cowan Bryce J.,
Moore G. R. Wayne,
Hashimoto Stanley A.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of cutaneous pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.597
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1600-0560
pISSN - 0303-6987
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0560.2007.00819.x
Subject(s) - glatiramer acetate , lipoatrophy , panniculitis , medicine , multiple sclerosis , dermatology , pathology , immunology , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , viral load , antiretroviral therapy
Lipoatrophy and localized panniculitis have been described as rare complications of daily subcutaneous glatiramer acetate injections for the treatment of relapsing‐remitting multiple sclerosis (MS). We describe the biopsies from two MS patients in a single neurologist’s practice who developed clinical lesions of lipoatrophy at the sites of subcutaneous glatiramer acetate injections. These biopsies showed a lobular panniculitis with lipoatrophy that more closely resembled lupus panniculitis than previous reports of localized panniculitis at glatiramer acetate injection sites. In one case, the area of clinical lipoatrophy continued to enlarge for 6 months after stopping glatiramer acetate therapy, before stabilizing at its current size for the last 8 months. Injection site reactions to glatiramer acetate should be considered in the differential diagnosis of biopsies that show a lupus panniculitis‐like appearance. Our observations indicate that glatiramer acetate induced panniculitis is common and may continue to progress after therapy has stopped. In this single neurologist’s practice, 64% of the patients receiving daily glatiramer acetate injections had clinical evidence of lipoatrophy or panniculitis. Of 100 consecutive patients receiving therapy for MS between February and November 2006, 14 patients were on glatiramer acetate, 9 of whom had clinical lipoatrophy.