Publication: Differential diagnosis between urticarial vasculitis and chronic spontaneous urticaria: an international Delphi survey
Program
School / College / Institute
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Krause, Karoline
Bonnekoh, Hanna
Jelden-Thurm, Jannis
Asero, Riccardo
Gimenez-Arnau, Ana Maria
Cardoso, Jose C.
Grattan, Clive
Lippert, Undine
Maurer, Marcus
Metz, Martin
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Abstract
BackgroundUrticarial vasculitis (UV) should be differentiated from chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) in patients initially presenting with recurrent wheals, although criteria for differential diagnosis remain ill-defined.ObjectivesTo set the goals, define criteria and unmet needs in UV diagnosis and differential diagnosis with CSU, and explore the possibility of coexistence of both diseases.MethodsThirteen experts experienced in UV research participated in a Delphi survey of European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology taskforce. This Delphi survey involved three rounds of anonymous responses to n = 32 questions with the aim to aggregate the experts' opinions and to achieve consensus. Urticaria specialists (n = 130, most from Urticaria Centers of Reference and Excellence) evaluated the consensus statements and recommendations in the fourth and final round.ResultsThe panel agreed that essential criteria to guide a skin biopsy in patients with recurrent wheals should include at least one of the following features: wheal duration >24 h, bruising/postinflammatory hyperpigmentation, and systemic symptoms. Leukocytoclasia and fibrin deposits were identified as a minimum set of UV histological criteria. As agreed by the panel members, CSU and normocomplementemic UV (NUV) may coexist in some patients.ConclusionsThe use of established criteria for the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of UV in patients with recurrent wheals can help guide the diagnostic approach and prompt earlier treatment. Further studies should investigate whether CSU and NUV are different entities or part of a disease spectrum.
Source
Publisher
Wiley
Subject
Allergy
Citation
Has Part
Source
Clinical and Translational Allergy
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1002/clt2.12305