Abstract

Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS) is an acute inflammatory vesiculobullous reaction of the skin and mucosa, e.g., the ocular surface, oral cavity, and genitals. In patients with extensive skin detachment and a poor prognosis, the condition is called toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN). Not all, but some patients with SJS/TEN manifest severe ocular lesions. Approximately 50% of SJS/TEN patients diagnosed by dermatologists and in burn units suffer from severe ocular complications (SOC) such as severe conjunctivitis with pseudomembrane and ocular surface epithelial defects in the acute stage. In the chronic stage, this results in sequelae such as severe dry eye and visual disturbance. Before 2005, our group of Japanese scientists started focusing on ophthalmic SJS/TEN with SOC. We found that cold medicines were the main causative drugs of SJS/TEN with SOC and that in Japanese patients, HLA-A*02:06 and HLA-B*44:03 were significantly associated with cold medicine-related SJS/TEN with SOC (CM-SJS/TEN with SOC). We expanded our studies and joined scientists from Korea, Brazil, India, Taiwan, Thailand, and the United Kingdom in an international collaboration to detect the genetic predisposition for SJS/TEN with SOC. This collaboration suggested that in Japanese patients, cold medicines, including NSAIDs, were the main causative drugs, and that HLA-A*02:06 was implicated in Japanese and Korean patients and HLA-B*44:03 in Japanese-, Indian-, and European ancestry Brazilian patients. Our joint findings reveal that there are ethnic differences in the HLA types associated with SJS/TEN with SOC.

Highlights

  • Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) is an acute inflammatory vesiculobullous reaction of the mucosa of the ocular surface, oral cavity, and genitals, and of the skin

  • We reported that about 80% of SJS/toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) with severe ocular complications (SOC) patients seen at the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine developed SJS/TEN within several days after taking cold medicines (8)

  • Together with our Korean collaborators we investigated the HLA types (HLA-A∗02:06 and HLA-B∗44:03) that were associated with CM-SJS/TEN with SOC in Japanese patients

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Summary

Mayumi Ueta*

Department of Ophthalmology, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan Edited by: Teresa Bellon, University Hospital La Paz Research Institute (IdiPAZ), Spain Specialty section: This article was submitted to Ophthalmology, a section of the journal

Frontiers in Medicine
INTRODUCTION
United Kingdom
DISCUSSION
SOC in Korean patients with
Full Text
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