Abstract
Solar urticaria is a rare form of urticaria occurring a few minutes after solar exposure. It is particularly incapaciting because it limits outdoor activities. Antihistamine and phototherapy are sometimes disappointing. A 32 Year-old woman had been suffering from severe solar urticaria since November 2000, which was confirmed by photobiological data. High-dose antihistamine treatment (fexofenadine 180 mg twice a day) was inefficient. Despite a first UVA desensitization, PUVAtherapy produced only a partial improvement and short lasting for protection, with an important handicap in daily life. In March 2002, among the others treatments, we chose intravenous immunoglobulins: 0.5 g/kg the first day then 1 g/kg the second and the third days. The minimal urticaria dose was raised from 1 J/cm2 in UVA before perfusion up to 15.6 J/cm2 48 hours later and in UVB from 100 mJ/cm2 up to 2,200 mJ/cm2. Clinically the improvement was significant but partial in daily activities. It was possible to reintroduce PUVAtherapy without UVA-desensitization and, for the first time, to obtain complete remission for more than 2 Months with an association of intravenous immunoglobulins, PUVAtherapy and antihistamine treatment. In July 2002, treatment was successfully repeated. First intention treatments (antihistamine and PUVAtherapy) are sometimes inefficient. Others treatments (plasmapheresis, ciclosporin, doxepin, cimetidine) are restrictive, not always efficient and can induce severe side-effects. We report the second case of solar urticaria improved by intravenous immunoglobulins. In spite of the cost, intravenous immunoglobulins seem to be an interesting treatment, at least by avoiding UVA-desensitization in severe cases of solar urticaria.
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