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Cutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders after COVID-19 vaccination: clinical presentation, histopathology, and outcomes

Emily R. Gordon, Bradley D. Kwinta, Celine M. Schreidah, Lauren M. Fahmy, Oluwaseyi Adeuyan, Dawn Queen, Megan H. Trager, Cynthia M. Magro, Larisa J. Geskin

2023Leukemia & lymphoma/Leukemia and lymphoma10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Individual reports described lymphoproliferative disorders (LPDs) after COVID-19 vaccination; however, the relationship between cases is unexamined. We aim to determine if there are cases of cutaneous LPDs associated with COVID-19 vaccination and their outcomes. We present a review of world literature, vaccine registries, and two unreported cases of LPDs after COVID-19 vaccination. Review of the medical literature, VAERS, and our two cases reveal predominance of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, younger patients, and males. All cases resulted in favorable outcomes. Approximately 84% of cases demonstrated CD30+ positivity in their skin biopsies, suggesting that an antigenic trigger may lead to a type IV adaptive immune response, with clonal expansion of CD30+ T-cells and subsequent oncogenic mutational hits eventuating in transient LPDs. LPDs after COVID-19 vaccination appear in the context of the same vaccines (proportionally to their global market shares), share clinical and pathological findings, and have indolent, self-limited character.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineVaccinationLymphoproliferative disordersContext (archaeology)CD30DermatologyImmunologyLymphomaBiologyPaleontologyCutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders researchAutoimmune Bullous Skin DiseasesLymphadenopathy Diagnosis and Analysis
Cutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders after COVID-19 vaccination: clinical presentation, histopathology, and outcomes | Litcius