4.1.4 Hidradenitis Suppurativa

Grading & Level of Importance: C

ICD-11

ED92.0 

Synonyms

Acne inversa; pyodermia fistulans sinifica.

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Acne inversa; inverse acne; suppurative hidradenitis; pyodermia fistulans sinifica; hidrosadenitis suppurativa; Verneuil disease.

Epidemiology

Prevalence 0.04% (range 0.03%-1%), annual age- and sex-adjusted incidence 6.0 per 100,000. Male:female ratio 1:1.2 to 1:3.3. 

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Prevalence 0.04% (range 0.03-1%), annual age- and sex-adjusted incidence 6.0 per 100,000. Increasing incidence over the past four decades particularly among women. Male: female ratio 1:1.2 to 1:3.3.

Definition

Chronic, inflammatory, recurrent, debilitating skin disease (of the terminal hair follicle) usually presenting after puberty with painful, deep-seated, inflamed lesions in the apocrine gland-bearing areas of the body, most commonly the axillary, inguinal, and ano-genital regions.

Aetiology & Pathogenesis

The exact pathogenetic mechanism of hidradenitis suppurativa remains unclear. Smoking, obesity and metabolic syndrome are major predisposing factors.

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The exact pathogenetic mechanism of hidradenitis suppurativa remains unclear. Potential causes are related to genetic, environmental, endocrine and microbiological factors. Follicular keratinocyte differentiation, adipocyte function and inflammation seem to be the major molecular pathogenetic pathways. Sporadic disease 70%, familial disease 30% (mutations at the nicastrin domain within the γ-secretase complex, chromosome 19p13). Smoking (12.6x), obesity (1.1x with every BMI unit; 18% from BMI>30) and metabolic syndrome (4.5x) are major predisposing factors.

Signs & Symptoms

Chronic recurrent inflammatory nodules, abscesses, draining tunnels (sinuses, fistulae and double comedones) and scars.

Localisation

Mostly intertriginous occurrence.

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Mostly intertriginous occurrence in decreasing order of frequency: inguinal, axillary, perineal and perianal, submammary and/or intermammary fold in women, buttocks, mons pubis, scalp, retroauricular area and eyelids.

Classification

Combination of anatomical classification: Hurley I, II, III and severity classification: mild, moderate, severe.


Syndromic hidradenitis suppurativa diseases.

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Combination of anatomical classification (Hurley I, II, III) and severity classification (mild, moderate, severe; IHS4 score). IHS4 can also evaluate HS severity in a dynamic manner.

IHS4 (Points) =

number of nodules x 3 +
number of abscesses x 2 +
number of draining tunnels x4

Mild HS ≤ 3 points

Moderate HS 4 - 10 points

Severe HS ≥ 11 points

Syndromic hidradenitis suppurativa diseases (follicular occlusion, Bazex-Dupré-Christol, Down’s, KID, PAPASH, PASS, PASH, and SAPHO syndromes, Dowling-Degos disease).

Laboratory & other workups

C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate. 

Dermatopathology

Heterogeneous histological pattern with hyperplasia of hair follicular epithelium and subepidermal and deep cellular inflammatory infiltrate. 

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Heterogeneous histological pattern with hyperplasia of hair follicular epithelium, hyperkeratosis of the terminal follicles, pronounced perifolliculitis, follicle rupture, epidermal psoriasiform hyperplasia, subepidermal and deep cellular inflammatory infiltrate, pronounced acute/chronic dermal inflammation, involvement of apocrine glands and involvement of the subcutis (fat tissue).

Course

Acute and chronic. 

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Acute: Recurrent, painful, deep-seated, inflamed nodules with burning, itching, local warmth, and hyperhidrosis.

Chronic: Multiple abscesses, double pseudocomedones, tunels, foul-smelling discharge, scarring, ulceration.

Complications

Squamous cell carcinoma in chronic ano-genital lesions, deep scars, depression, unemployment, change of profession.

Diagnosis

Outbreak of boils during the last 6 months with a minimum of 2 boils in one of the following 6 locations: axilla, groin, genitals, buttocks, under the breasts and perianal area, neck and abdomen regions. 

Differential Diagnosis

Staphylococcal infection (furuncle, carbuncle), cutaneous Crohn’s disease , primary or metastatic tumors, lymphogranuloma venereum, apocrine abscess.

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Staphylococcal infection (furuncle, carbuncle), cutaneous Crohn’s disease, primary or metastatic tumors, lymphogranuloma venereum, apocrine abscess, rare diseases (cutaneous actinomycosis, tuberculosis cutis colliquativa).

Prevention & Therapy

Active inflammatory stage


Mild: Topical clindamycin, topical antimicrobials.

Moderate: Oral clindamycin plus rifampicin; tetracycline; adalimumab; acitretin.

Severe: Adalimumab +/- clindamycin/doxycycline.


Chronic including inactive (non-inflammatory) stage.


Local or wide excision.

 

Prevention


Weight loss and tobacco abstinence, pain management, treatment of secondary infections.

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Prevention: Weight loss and tobacco abstinence, pain management, treatment of superinfections.

Special

Comorbid disorders: Inflammatory bowel disease, spondylarthropathy, increased cardiovascular risk.


Syndromic hidradenitis suppurativa diseases are rare.

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