Skin ulcers are defined as tissue loss interesting the deeper layers of the dermis and hypodermis, with low tendency to spontaneous healing. They cause disability related to pain, risk of infection and amputation, chronic management, requiring working absence with notably economic burden. The major cause is often related to underlying vascular disease, infections, tumors, autoimmunity, trauma, even if literature occasionally reported several cases of drug inducing skin ulceration. Most of drugs involved are chemotherapy agents and more recently molecular target therapies. Evidences supporting these drugs as the major cause of skin ulcers include delay of onset after therapy initiation, improvement after withdrawal of the drug, recurrence after its reintroduction and, sometimes, simultaneous occurrence of other skin lesions that have previously been reported to be associated with these agents. Attention should be reserved to patients undergoing antineoplastic agents, especially if previously affected by predisposing comorbidities, considering such side effect as possible differential diagnosis for skin ulceration in neoplastic patients.

Drug cutaneous side effect: Focus on skin ulceration / D'Epiro, S.; Salvi, M.; Luzi, A.; Mattozzi, Carlo; Luci, C.; Macaluso, L.; Marzocca, F.; Salvo, V.; Cantisani, Carmen; Paolino, G.; Calvieri, Stefano; Richetta, Antonio Giovanni. - In: LA CLINICA TERAPEUTICA. - ISSN 0009-9074. - ELETTRONICO. - 165:4(2014), pp. 323-329. [10.7417/CT.2014.1750]

Drug cutaneous side effect: Focus on skin ulceration

MATTOZZI, CARLO;CANTISANI, CARMEN;Paolino, G.;CALVIERI, Stefano;RICHETTA, Antonio Giovanni
2014

Abstract

Skin ulcers are defined as tissue loss interesting the deeper layers of the dermis and hypodermis, with low tendency to spontaneous healing. They cause disability related to pain, risk of infection and amputation, chronic management, requiring working absence with notably economic burden. The major cause is often related to underlying vascular disease, infections, tumors, autoimmunity, trauma, even if literature occasionally reported several cases of drug inducing skin ulceration. Most of drugs involved are chemotherapy agents and more recently molecular target therapies. Evidences supporting these drugs as the major cause of skin ulcers include delay of onset after therapy initiation, improvement after withdrawal of the drug, recurrence after its reintroduction and, sometimes, simultaneous occurrence of other skin lesions that have previously been reported to be associated with these agents. Attention should be reserved to patients undergoing antineoplastic agents, especially if previously affected by predisposing comorbidities, considering such side effect as possible differential diagnosis for skin ulceration in neoplastic patients.
2014
Drug; Side effects; Skin; Ulcerations; Medicine (all)
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Drug cutaneous side effect: Focus on skin ulceration / D'Epiro, S.; Salvi, M.; Luzi, A.; Mattozzi, Carlo; Luci, C.; Macaluso, L.; Marzocca, F.; Salvo, V.; Cantisani, Carmen; Paolino, G.; Calvieri, Stefano; Richetta, Antonio Giovanni. - In: LA CLINICA TERAPEUTICA. - ISSN 0009-9074. - ELETTRONICO. - 165:4(2014), pp. 323-329. [10.7417/CT.2014.1750]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/791201
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