4.5 Review

New Practical Aspects of Sweet Syndrome

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 301-318

Publisher

ADIS INT LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s40257-022-00673-4

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Funding

  1. Blanche Bender Professorship for Cancer Research
  2. MD Anderson Core Grant [P30 CA16672]
  3. John R Stanton Fellowship

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Sweet syndrome is an inflammatory skin reaction characterized by skin lesions and infiltration of neutrophils. It is associated with malignancy, drug use, and pregnancy, among other factors. Corticosteroids are the main treatment for Sweet syndrome, but new therapeutic agents have also been introduced. Although the exact etiology of Sweet syndrome remains unclear, new mechanisms have been recognized.
Sweet syndrome (SS), or acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis, is an inflammatory, non-infectious skin reaction characterized clinically by tender, erythematous papules/plaques/pustules/nodules commonly appearing on the upper limbs, trunk, and head and neck; histologically, SS is characterized by dense neutrophilic infiltrate in the dermis. SS is accompanied by fever; an elevation of inflammatory markers (e.g., erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C reactive protein) in serum may also be observed. Although most cases of SS are idiopathic, SS also occurs in the setting of malignancy or following administration of an associated drug. SS has also been reported in association with pregnancy and a burgeoning list of infectious (most commonly upper respiratory tract infections) and inflammatory diseases; likewise, the litany of possible iatrogenic triggers has also grown. Over the past several years, a wider spectrum of SS presentation has been realized, with several reports highlighting novel clinical and histological variants. Corticosteroids continue to be efficacious first-line therapy for the majority of patients with SS, although novel steroid-sparing agents have been recently added to the therapeutic armamentarium against refractory SS. New mechanisms of SS induction have also been recognized, although the precise etiology of SS still remains elusive. Here, we catalogue the various clinical and histological presentations of SS, summarize recently reported disease associations and iatrogenic triggers, and review treatment options. We also attempt to frame the findings of this review in the context of established and emerging paradigms of SS pathogenesis.

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