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Successful treatment of malakoplakia of the liver and skin in a pediatric liver transplant patient.

AbstractBACKGROUND:
Malakoplakia occurs uncommonly at any age, but pediatric reports are exceptionally limited. Malakoplakia appears primarily in the urinary tract, although involvement of essentially all organs has been reported, cutaneous malakoplakia is very uncommon and liver involvement is the rarest.
METHOD:
We report the first pediatric case of concurrent hepatic and cutaneous malakoplakia in a pediatric liver transplant recipient. We also provide a literature review for cutaneous malakoplakia cases in children.
RESULT:
A 16-year-old male received a deceased-donor liver transplant for autoimmune hepatitis, present with the persistence of the liver mass of unknown etiology and cutaneous plaque-like lesions around the surgical scar. Core biopsies taken from the skin and abdominal wall lesions demonstrated histiocytes containing Michaelis-Gutmann bodies (MGB) revealing the diagnosis. The patient successfully was treated with antibiotics alone for 9 months without surgical intervention or a decrease in immunosuppressive therapy.
CONCLUSION:
This case demonstrates the need to include malakoplakia in the differential diagnosis of mass-forming lesions after solid transplantation and increase awareness of this very rare entity in pediatrics.
AuthorsAndrew Gerard, Hector Mesa, Lara Danziger-Isakov, Kathryn L Barros, Muayad Alali
JournalPediatric transplantation (Pediatr Transplant) Vol. 27 Issue 5 Pg. e14492 (08 2023) ISSN: 1399-3046 [Electronic] Denmark
PMID36860187 (Publication Type: Review, Case Reports)
Copyright© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Topics
  • Male
  • Humans
  • Child
  • Adolescent
  • Liver Transplantation (adverse effects)
  • Malacoplakia (diagnosis, etiology, pathology)
  • Living Donors
  • Skin (pathology)
  • Liver (pathology)

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