Authors: Vanessa Ngan, Staff Writer, 2005; Updated: Dr Aswan Tai, Junior Doctor, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia; Dr Sarah Smithson, Dermatologist, Skin Health Institute, Melbourne, Australia. Copy edited by Gus Mitchell. September 2021
Reactive perforating collagenosis is the most common type of primary perforating dermatosis. It is characterised by the transepithelial elimination of collagen from the dermis through the epidermis to the skin surface.
Reactive perforating collagenosis
Who gets reactive perforating collagenosis?
Familial reactive perforating collagenosis
Rare
Autosomal dominant or autosomal recessive inheritance and sporadic cases
Other reported associations include concurrent itchy dermatoses, malignancies, pregnancy and endocrine disorders, infections and infestations, and medications
What causes reactive perforating collagenosis?
The pathogenesis of reactive perforating collagenosis is unclear.
The inherited form appears to be due to a geneticabnormality in collagen causing focal damage and extrusion through the epidermis. Cold weather and skin trauma typically trigger or aggravate the skin lesions.
Microvascular insufficiency and elevated fibronectin levels in plasma, as seen with diabetes and renal failure, may play a role in the acquired form. Another theory suggests microdeposition of substances and abnormal glycosylation of collagen I and III in diabetes alter collagen fibres.
Superficial trauma, such as scratching, and cold leads to necrobiosis and epidermal thinning in susceptible patients.
What are the clinical features of reactive perforating collagenosis?
Reactive perforating collagenosis is a papulonodular mucocutaneous disorder with adherent keratotic plugs and crusts.
Red-brown umbilicatedpapules and nodules, often with a cup-shaped depression, central keratotic crust, and erythematous halo
Variable in shape and size, usually up to 10 mm in diameter; a rare giant form has been described with individual lesions up to 10 cm in diameter
Lesions are typically intensely itchy; pain or tenderness is rare
What is the outcome for reactive perforating collagenosis?
Reactive perforating collagenosis remains confined to the skin.
Familial reactive perforating collagenosis is a lifelong condition with lesions becoming larger and more numerous with age.
Individual lesions in both the familial and acquired forms are self-healing but often recur.
Bibliography
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