Grover’s disease (GD) is a common acquired skin disorder characterized by a pruritic papulovesicular eruption of the trunk, whose histopathologic hallmark is acantholysis of the epidermis.
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History
- Described in 1970 by Ralph W. Grover as “transient acantholytic dermatosis”
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Epidermiology
- Underestimated
Etiology: unknown
- Acquired
- Causal relationship with heat and sweating has been postulated
- Electron microscopic studies demonstrated that dissolution of desmosomal attachment plaques is the likely cause of acantholysis in Grover disease
- “Eccrine acrosyringeal acantholytic disease → obstruction of sweat glands leads to escape of sweat urea into the epidermis with dissolution of desmosomal attachment plaque and acantholysis?”
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Clinical presentation: subtle
- Acute to subacute monomorphous skin eruption of slightly flesh colored to erytematous, edematous papules and/or vesicles
- May gave keratotic component - papulosquamous lesions
- Described as “pseudoherpetic”
- Usually on the trunk, may extend to the extremities
- Acral and mucosa spared
- Pruritus, sometimes severe and out of proportion
- No pruritus → higher association with cancer
- Exacerbated by
- Sweating
- Heat exposure
- Bedbound hospitalization
- Sunlight
- Ionizing and UV radiation
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Comorbidities
- Hematologic malignancies (13%)
- Is Grover a paraneoplastic phenomenon or associated with antineoplastic agents, excessive perspiration, fever, occlusive immobility or ionizing or ultraviolet radiation?
- Solid tumors especially genitourinary (10%)
- Concurrent dermatitis
- Asteatotic eczema, allergic contact dermatitis, atopic dermatitis, irritation from adhesive tape
- AIDS
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Histology
- Epidermal acantholysis
- Predominant histologic patterns
- Pemphigus vulgaris-like
- Darier disease-like
- Spongiotic
- Pemphigus foliaceus-like
- Hailey-Hailey disease-like
- Infiltrate
- May have eosinophils → Acherman postulated that the intensity of the pruritus is roughly proportional to the number of eosinophils in the dermal infiltrate
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DDx
- Miliaria rubra
- Folliculitis
- Papular urticaria
- Maculopapular drug reactions
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Treatment
- General measures
- Remove and avoid possible triggers (i.e. excessive sweat, high temperature, prolonged bedding and xerosis)
- Use emollients to prevent xerosis
- High to moderate potency topical corticosterpoids (1st line)
- Systemic retinoids (2nd line)
- Isotretinoin, acitretin
- Systemic corticosteroids (2nd line)
- Adjuvants
- Topical calcineurin inhibitors
- Topical antibiotics (erythrommucin, clindamycin)
- Topical retinoids (tretinoin)
- Topical vitamin D derivatives (calcipotriol/tacalcitol)
- Alternatives
- Dapsone (only 1 patient responded out of 10)
- PUVA
- UVA1
- Cyclosporine
- Etanercept
- ALA-photodynamic therapy
- Rituximab
- Total skin electron beam therapy
- Topical TCA
- Topica 5-FU
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Prognosis
- Spontaneous resolution without any treatment in 1-8 months in 42% of cases
- Persistence or recurrence is not infrequent
- 3 courses:
- Transient eruptive
- Chronic asymptomatic
- Persistent pruritic