Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvement

Abstract Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides (FMF) is a rare variant of Mycosis Fungoides involving the scalp leading to alopecia. The clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 patients were analyzed and compared with the reports in the literature. Gender, age, disease stage, site of onset were taken i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giuseppe Gallo, Alessandro Pileri, Michela Starace, Aurora Alessandrini, Alba Guglielmo, Simone Ribero, Pietro Quaglino, Bianca Maria Piraccini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-05-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90168-9
id doaj-f5b7a19b73f348768636fda900194fc5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f5b7a19b73f348768636fda900194fc52021-05-23T11:35:41ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-05-011111810.1038/s41598-021-90168-9Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvementGiuseppe Gallo0Alessandro Pileri1Michela Starace2Aurora Alessandrini3Alba Guglielmo4Simone Ribero5Pietro Quaglino6Bianca Maria Piraccini7Department of Medical Sciences, Section of Dermatology, Dermatology Clinic, University of TurinDivision of Dermatology, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of BolognaDivision of Dermatology, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of BolognaDivision of Dermatology, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of BolognaDivision of Dermatology, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of BolognaDepartment of Medical Sciences, Section of Dermatology, Dermatology Clinic, University of TurinDepartment of Medical Sciences, Section of Dermatology, Dermatology Clinic, University of TurinDivision of Dermatology, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of BolognaAbstract Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides (FMF) is a rare variant of Mycosis Fungoides involving the scalp leading to alopecia. The clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 patients were analyzed and compared with the reports in the literature. Gender, age, disease stage, site of onset were taken into consideration. Clinical and trichoscopic analyses were performed on each patient. From a clinical point of view, Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides lesions involving the scalp presented as generalized alopecia (27.8%) or patchy-plaque alopecia (72.2%). Trichoscopic analysis revealed six most frequent features: single hair (83.3%), dotted dilated vessels (77.8%), broken-dystrophic hairs (66.7%), vellus hairs (61.1%), spermatozoa-like pattern vessels (55.6%), and yellow dots (55.6%). Additional identified trichoscopic patterns were dilation of follicular openings, scales-crusts, purpuric dots, short hair with split-end, pigtail hairs, perifollicular hyperkeratosis, milky-white globules, black dots, white dots/lines and absence of follicular dots. These trichoscopic features were further correlated to clinical presentations and stage of the disease. The rarity of the disease is a limitation. The relatively high number of patients allowed to identify several clinical and trichoscopic patterns that could be featured as specific or highly suspicious for FMF in order to consider trichoscopy as a complementary diagnostic approach and improve the differential diagnoses between FMF and other scalp disorders.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90168-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giuseppe Gallo
Alessandro Pileri
Michela Starace
Aurora Alessandrini
Alba Guglielmo
Simone Ribero
Pietro Quaglino
Bianca Maria Piraccini
spellingShingle Giuseppe Gallo
Alessandro Pileri
Michela Starace
Aurora Alessandrini
Alba Guglielmo
Simone Ribero
Pietro Quaglino
Bianca Maria Piraccini
Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvement
Scientific Reports
author_facet Giuseppe Gallo
Alessandro Pileri
Michela Starace
Aurora Alessandrini
Alba Guglielmo
Simone Ribero
Pietro Quaglino
Bianca Maria Piraccini
author_sort Giuseppe Gallo
title Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvement
title_short Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvement
title_full Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvement
title_fullStr Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvement
title_full_unstemmed Clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with scalp involvement
title_sort clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 cases of folliculotropic mycosis fungoides with scalp involvement
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides (FMF) is a rare variant of Mycosis Fungoides involving the scalp leading to alopecia. The clinical and trichoscopic features in 18 patients were analyzed and compared with the reports in the literature. Gender, age, disease stage, site of onset were taken into consideration. Clinical and trichoscopic analyses were performed on each patient. From a clinical point of view, Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides lesions involving the scalp presented as generalized alopecia (27.8%) or patchy-plaque alopecia (72.2%). Trichoscopic analysis revealed six most frequent features: single hair (83.3%), dotted dilated vessels (77.8%), broken-dystrophic hairs (66.7%), vellus hairs (61.1%), spermatozoa-like pattern vessels (55.6%), and yellow dots (55.6%). Additional identified trichoscopic patterns were dilation of follicular openings, scales-crusts, purpuric dots, short hair with split-end, pigtail hairs, perifollicular hyperkeratosis, milky-white globules, black dots, white dots/lines and absence of follicular dots. These trichoscopic features were further correlated to clinical presentations and stage of the disease. The rarity of the disease is a limitation. The relatively high number of patients allowed to identify several clinical and trichoscopic patterns that could be featured as specific or highly suspicious for FMF in order to consider trichoscopy as a complementary diagnostic approach and improve the differential diagnoses between FMF and other scalp disorders.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90168-9
work_keys_str_mv AT giuseppegallo clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
AT alessandropileri clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
AT michelastarace clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
AT auroraalessandrini clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
AT albaguglielmo clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
AT simoneribero clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
AT pietroquaglino clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
AT biancamariapiraccini clinicalandtrichoscopicfeaturesin18casesoffolliculotropicmycosisfungoideswithscalpinvolvement
_version_ 1721429527542890496