Blaschkoid Epidermolytic Ichthyosis
Maximillian Weigelt
Pro | Pathology, Dermatopathology
Presented at: 28th Joint Meeting of the ISDP
Date: 2025-03-05 00:00:00
Views: 38
Summary: Epidermolytic ichthyosis (bullous ichthyosiform erythroderma) is a rare genetic disorder caused by autosomal dominant mutations in keratin genes KRT1 or KRT10. It is characterized by severe blistering and erythroderma at birth, with variable hyperkeratosis as childhood progresses. Blaschkoid epidermolytic ichthyosis (ichthyosis hystrix) is caused by post-zygotic somatic mutations in KRT1/KRT10 during embryogenesis and does not cause blistering at birth. It is the only human keratin disease which exhibits mosaicism; herein we present one such case. An 18-month-old boy presented to the clinic with skin lesions noted a few weeks after birth. There was no history of blistering or erythroderma. Physical exam revealed diffuse hyperpigmented (and focally verrucous) patches and plaques on the face, trunk, and extremities along Blaschko lines. Biopsy revealed hyperkeratosis, papillomatosis, and acanthosis with areas of keratinocyte vacuolization and cytolysis in the strata spinosum and granulosum (epidermolytic hyperkeratosis). A diagnosis of Blaschkoid epidermolytic ichthyosis was considered most likely. The differential diagnosis includes systematized epidermal nevi, epidermal nevus syndromes, congenital ichthyoses, and vesiculobullous disorders of childhood; the histopathologic finding of epidermolytic hyperkeratosis is the key distinguishing feature. Patients with Blaschkoid epidermolytic ichthyosis may produce offspring with epidermolytic ichthyosis due to gonadal mosaicism; referral for genetic counselling may be appropriate.