Abstract

Sarcoidosis is a multisystem granulomatous disease that can affect almost any organ including the skin, liver, ocular, cardiac, renal, nervous, musculoskeletal and endocrine systems. Systemic evaluation is indicated in all patients diagnosed with cutaneous sarcoidosis, as it is associated with asymptomatic systemic disease in 30%-40% of patients. Guidelines recommend that patients diagnosed with sarcoidosis undergo baseline and surveillance investigations including full blood count (FBC), renal and liver profile, Vitamin D, serum calcium, electrocardiography (ECG), chest radiography, pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and ophthalmology examination to assess for systemic involvement. Recommendations for surveillance monitoring vary on interval duration but include regular FBC, biochemistry, chest radiography and PFTs, with additional investigations and prompt referral to respective specialties as indicated.. We conducted a retrospective analysis to evaluate extracutaneous involvement and systemic evaluation of patients diagnosed with cutaneous sarcoidosis during the period 2004-2020, and compared our findings with international guidelines. Cutaneous manifestation was the primary presentation for 67% of the patients (12 of 18), an extracutaneous disease subsequently developed in 67% (8 of 12) of these patients. Baseline investigations included chest radiography (94%; 17 of 18), PFTs (39%; 7 of 18), FBC (94% (17 of 18), renal profile (89%; 16 of 18), liver function tests (83%; 15 of 18) and serum calcium (89%; 16 of 18); ECG was performed for 4 (25%) of 16 patients. No Vitamin D levels were recorded. Specialist referral was required for 89% (16 of 18); of these 16 patients, 94% (15 of 16) required referral to the Respiratory Medicine department, 69% (11 of 16) to Ophthalmology and 19% (3 of 16) to Nephrology. The results highlight the importance of a structured protocol for the systemic evaluation of patients diagnosed with cutaneous sarcoidosis. We subsequently developed a baseline and surveillance protocol for the assessment of extracutaneous disease in patients at University Hospital Limerick.

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