Dermatological signs in liver transplant recipients

Background In recent years, the number of liver transplantations for advanced‐stage liver diseases has considerably increased and the patients have a wide range of dermatologic manifestations. Aim This study aims to reveal cutaneous, mucosal, and nail lesions in liver transplant recipients in quite...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cosmetic dermatology 2021-09, Vol.20 (9), p.2969-2974
Hauptverfasser: Sarac, Gulbahar, Ozcan, Kubra Nur, Baskiran, Adil, Cenk, Hulya, Sarac, Mehmet, Sener, Serpil, Yilmaz, Sezai
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background In recent years, the number of liver transplantations for advanced‐stage liver diseases has considerably increased and the patients have a wide range of dermatologic manifestations. Aim This study aims to reveal cutaneous, mucosal, and nail lesions in liver transplant recipients in quite large patient series. Patients/Methods The study included 520 patients in the Inonu University Liver Transplantation Institute. New and followed‐up patients attended to the study between May and October 2019. The patients were examined by a dermatologist, and their data were recorded. Results The study included 163 female and 357 male patients with the main age of 44.20 ± 18.18 (range: 1‐83 years), and 465 livers (89.4%) were taken from live donors, while 54 livers (10.4%) were taken from cadavers. A total of 314 (60.4%) patients had dermatophyte infections, 174 (33.4%) patients had pathological nail changes, and 427 (82.1%) patients had oral mucosal lesions. Graft‐versus‐host disease (GVHD) developed in 9 (1.73%) patients after the transplantation, and 5 patients died of GVHD. Four patients had cutaneous malignancies. Conclusions Tumoral and nontumoral dermatological diseases may be encountered following the transplantation depending on underlying liver disease, immunosuppressive treatment, the graft itself, or any primary cutaneous disease. Liver transplantation recipients require a multidisciplinary clinical approach, and dermatological care must be an integral part of this approach.
ISSN:1473-2130
1473-2165
DOI:10.1111/jocd.13944