Rationale: Erythema multiforme (EM) is an immune-mediated disease with mucocutaneous localization and plurietiologic determinism. The term “multiforme” refers to the variety of aspects that the lesions can take from patient to patient and during evolution in a single patient. Patient concerns: We have selected 2 cases of small children diagnosed with different etiology of EM to illustrate the importance of a correct and fast diagnosis. Case 1 involves a 2-year-old girl from a rural area who presented with fever and pruritic erythematous papular eruption. The onset of the symptoms was 3 days before presentation with fever and ulcerative lesions on the oral and labial mucosa, followed by the appearance of erythematous macular lesions, with progressive confluence to intense pruritic patches. The 2nd involves a 2-year-old boy with fever, loss of appetite, productive cough, and petechiae. He had corticosensible immune thrombocytopenia from the age of 6 months, with many recurrences. The patient received treatment with ampicillin/sulbactam and symptomatics for an erythemato-pultaceous angina. During the 2nd day of treatment the patient developed an erythematous macular eruption on the face, scalp, trunk, and limbs, with bullae formation. Diagnoses: The 1st patient was diagnosed based on biologic findings: positive inflammatory syndrome, elevated level of anti-Mycoplasma pneumoniae immunoglobulin M antibodies and immunoglobulin E. Histopathologic examination described papillary dermal edema, inflammatory infiltrate, and lymphocyte exocytosis. In the 2nd case, the hemoleucogram identified 12,000/mm3 platelets and the medulogram aspect was normal. Serology for Epstein–Barr virus was negative. The diagnosis was EM secondary to M pneumoniae infection in case 1 and secondary to administration of ampicillin/sulbactam in case 2. Interventions: In both cases, etiopathogenic treatment consisting of steroidal antiinflammatory drugs, antihistamines was administered. Because of specific etiology, the 1st case received antibiotics. Outcomes: The evolution was favorable in 10 to 14 days; the patients were discharged after etiopathogenic treatment consisting of steroidal antiinflammatory drugs, antihistamines, and/or antibiotics. Lessons: Performing a detailed clinical examination, medical history of drug use, infection or general diseases can establish a good diagnosis of EM. Histopathologic examination can help. The treatment is etiologic, pathogenic, and symptomatic. EM usually has a self-limited evolution.
Sarcoidosis is a non-necrotizing granulomatous inflammatory multisystemic disorder of unknown etiology. In children, as in adults, it can involve a few or all organ systems to a varying extent and degree, entailing multisystemic manifestations. Kidney involvement in pediatric-onset adult-type sarcoidosis is rare, with a wide range of renal manifestations, most of them related to calcium metabolism. Children with renal sarcoidosis tend to be more symptomatic than adults, although male patients have a higher prevalence. We present the case of a 10-year-old boy who presented with advanced renal failure with nephrocalcinosis and important hepatosplenomegaly. The diagnosis was established by histopathological examination, with consequent cortisone therapy and hemodialysis. This review emphasizes that sarcoidosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of pediatric patients with acute kidney insufficiency or chronic kidney disease of an unknown etiology. As far as we know, this is the first study regarding extrapulmonary sarcoidosis in children from Romania.
Over the past 40 years, the 5-years-overall survival rate of pediatric cancer reached 75–80%, and for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), exceeded 90%. Leukemia continues to be a major cause of mortality and morbidity for specific patient populations, including infants, adolescents, and patients with high-risk genetic abnormalities. The future of leukemia treatment needs to count better on molecular therapies as well as immune and cellular therapy. Advances in the scientific interface have led naturally to advances in the treatment of childhood cancer. These discoveries have involved the recognition of the importance of chromosomal abnormalities, the amplification of the oncogenes, the aberration of tumor suppressor genes, as well as the dysregulation of cellular signaling and cell cycle control. Lately, novel therapies that have already proven efficient on relapsed/refractory ALL in adults are being evaluated in clinical trials for young patients. Tirosine kinase inhibitors are, by now, part of the standardized treatment of Ph+ALL pediatric patients, and Blinatumomab, with promising results in clinical trials, received both FDA and EMA approval for use in children. Moreover, other targeted therapies such as aurora-kinase inhibitors, MEK-inhibitors, and proteasome-inhibitors are involved in clinical trials that include pediatric patients. This is an overview of the novel leukemia therapies that have been developed starting from the molecular discoveries and those that have been applied in pediatric populations.
Thrombotic microangiopathy can present itself in the form of several clinical entities, representing a real challenge for diagnosis and treatment in pediatric practice. Our article aims to explore the evolution of two rare cases of pediatric thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) and atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) with extremely similar clinical pictures, which, coincidentally, presented at approximately the same time in our hospital. These cases and our literature review demonstrate the multiple facets of thrombotic microangiopathy, which can produce various determinations and salient manifestations even among the pediatric population. TTP and aHUS may represent genuine diagnostic pitfalls through the overlap of their clinical and biological findings, although they develop through fundamentally different mechanisms that require different therapeutic approaches. As a novelty, we underline that COVID-19 infection cannot be excluded as potential trigger for TTP and aHUS in our patients and we predict that other reports of such an association will follow, raising a complex question of COVID-19’s implication in the occurrence and evolution of thrombotic microangiopathies. On this matter, we conducted literature research that resulted in 15 cases of COVID-19 pediatric infections associated with either TTP or aHUS. Taking into consideration the morbidity associated with TTP and aHUS, an elaborate differential diagnosis and prompt intervention are of the essence.
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