Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa (DEB): How Can Pregnancy Alter the Course of This Rare Disease? An Updated Literature Review on Obstetrical Management with an Additional Italian Experience
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Antenatal Care
2.1. Prenatal Genetic Testing
2.2. Maternal-Fetal Clinical Monitoring
3. Course of DEB during Pregnancy
4. Delivery
5. Anesthesia
6. Postnatal Care
First Author (Year) Study Type | Number of Cases (Age, in Years) | Type of DEB (Severity) | Parity | Trend of Blistering during Pregnancy | Antenatal Complications | Gestation at Delivery | Mode of Delivery | Indication for Mode of Delivery | Anesthesia | Skin Wound Healing | Clinical Complications | Breast Feeding |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Berryhill et al. (1978) [21] CR | 1 (35) | ND (Severe) | ND | ND | Preeclampsia | 34.6 | Emergency CS | SROM, breech presentation | General (spinal/epidural anesthesia contraindicated due to infected lumbosacral blisters) | ND | Eclampsia | ND |
Broster et al. (1987) [17] CR | 1 (17) | DDEB (Moderate) | First | ND | None | Term | Emergency CS | Primary cephalo-pelvic disproportion | Epidural | ND | None | ND |
Büscher et al. (1997) [10] CR | 1 (24) | RDEB (severe) | First | Stable | None | Term | Vaginal—after mediolateral episiotomy | / | Local | Uncomplicated | None | Yes, but discontinued because of blister formation around the nipples |
1 (24)—same patient, second pregnancy | RDEB (severe) | Second | Stable | Anemia; GDM; polyhydramnios | Term | Vaginal—after mediolateral episiotomy | / | ND | Uncomplicated | None | ND | |
Bianca et al. (2003) [11] CR | 1 (ND) | RDEB (severe) | First | Stable | FGR | 36.0 | Emergency CS | Genital mucous lesions; FGR; PPROM with pre-term labour | Epidural | A blister around CS scar | None | ND |
Baloch et al. (2008) [8] CR | 1 (29) | RDEB (severe) | First | ND | None | 40.0 | Vaginal—with small posterior vaginal wall tear (not sutured) | / | None | Uncomplicated | None | Uncomplicated |
1 (33) | RDEB (severe) | First | ND | None | 39.1 | Emergency CS | SROM; patient’s request | Spinal | Uncomplicated | None | Yes, but discontinued because of blister formation around the nipples | |
Bolt et al. (2009) [16] CR + literature review | 1 (25) | RDEB (severe) | Second | ND | Anemia; MRSA-infected lumbosacral blisters | 38.2 | Elective CS | Patient’s request | Spinal (risks of general anesthesia deemed greater than spinal at infected site) | Few blisters at CS scar | None | Yes, and continued despite blister formation around the nipples |
Choi et al. (2011) [31] CR | 1 (ND) | RDEB (severe) | 3 pregnancies | Stable | None | Term in all pregnancies | Vaginal—with vaginal wall tear (sutured) | / | ND | Uncomplicated | None | No, to prevent blistering around the nipples (doctors’ choice) |
1 (ND) | RDEB (severe) | 5 pregnancies | Stable | None | Term in all pregnancies | Vaginal | / | ND | None | None | ND | |
Hanafusa et al. (2012) [19] CR | 1 (30) | RDEB (severe) | First | Worsened (increase in skin ulcers around lower abdomen) | Moderate anemia | Term | Vaginal—after mediolateral episiotomy | / | ND | Uncomplicated | None | No, to prevent blistering around the nipples (doctors’ choice) |
1 (27) | RDEB (severe) | 2 pregnancies | ND | First pregnancy: threatened miscarriage. Second pregnancy: slight anemia | Term in all pregnancies | Vaginal—after mediolateral episiotomy | / | ND | Uncomplicated | First delivery complicated by PPE | Yes | |
1 (21) | RDEB (severe) | First | Worsened (increase in skin ulcers around lower abdomen) | Moderate anemia | 39.6 | Vaginal | / | ND | Uncomplicated | None | No, because of blisters around the nipples | |
Ozkaya et al. (2012) [22] CR | 1 (26) | RDEB (ND) | First | Worsened after 34 weeks (widespread skin erosions, including the vulval region and vaginal mucosa) | Anhydramnios; FGR | 40.0 | Emergent CS | Skin erosions on vulval region and vaginal mucosa; non-reassuring fetal status at admission for initial labor | ND | Uncomplicated | None | ND |
Colgrove et al. (2014) [13] CR + literature review | 1 (19) | ADDEB (mild) | Fifth (but the first to proceed after four abortions) | Stable | None | 39.0 | Elective CS | Patient’s request | Spinal | Uncomplicated | None | No, to prevent blistering around the nipples (doctors’ choice) |
Turmo-Tejera et al. (2014) [33] CR | 1 (28) | RDEB (severe) | First | ND | ND | 37.0 | Elective CS | ND | Spinal | Uncomplicated | None | ND |
Araújo et al. (2017) [15] CR | 1 (26) | RDEB (severe) | First | ND | SCC in early pregnancy requiring amputation of right hand; anemia | 36.0 | Elective CS | Lesions in the vaginal canal; appearance of a right axillary swelling requiring urgent investigation (suspected metastasis) | Spinal | Uncomplicated | None | ND |
Intong et al. (2017) [14] Retrospective study | 12 patients (ND) | DDEB (ND) | ND | All stable | ND | ND | 26 vaginal; 4 emergency CS | ND | ND | As for vaginal, all reported good healing of their episiotomy and tears, where occurring | ND | Yes |
3 patients (ND) | RDEB (ND) | ND | 2 stable; 1 improved | ND | ND | 8 vaginal; 1 elective CS | ND | ND | As for vaginal, all reported good healing of their episiotomy and tears, where occurring | ND | Yes, but 1 discontinued because of blister formation around the nipples | |
Boria et al. (2019) [12] CR | 1 (40) | RDEB (severe) | First | Worsened (infection of skin lesions) | Hypothyroidism; iron-deficiency anemia; GDM; FGR | 37.4 | Elective CS | Vaginal stenosis | ND | Uncomplicated | None | No, because of blisters around the nipples |
1 (25) | RDEB (moderate) | Second | ND | Iron-deficiency anemia; vitamin D deficiency | 36.2 | Elective CS | Previous CS; vaginal stenosis | ND | Uncomplicated | None | Yes | |
Lopes et al. (2020) [20] CR | 1 (25) | RDEB (severe) | Second (but the first to proceed after one abortion) | SCC worsened | Invasive SCC aroused before pregnancy | 36.0 | CS | ND | ND | ND | Death 6 months after delivery due to neoplastic progression | ND |
Vimercati et al. (2024) | 1 (36) | RDEB (severe) | First | Improved—with rebound effect after childbirth | Anemia; FGR | 36.1 | Emergency CS | Initial labor; breech presentation | Combined, peridural and spinal | Uncomplicated | None | Yes, but discontinued because of blister formation around the nipples |
7. An Italian Experience
8. Comments and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Vimercati, A.; Cazzato, G.; Lospalluti, L.; Foligno, S.; Taliento, C.; Trojanowska, K.B.; Cicinelli, E.; Bonamonte, D.; Caliandro, D.; Vitagliano, A.; et al. Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa (DEB): How Can Pregnancy Alter the Course of This Rare Disease? An Updated Literature Review on Obstetrical Management with an Additional Italian Experience. Diseases 2024, 12, 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases12050104
Vimercati A, Cazzato G, Lospalluti L, Foligno S, Taliento C, Trojanowska KB, Cicinelli E, Bonamonte D, Caliandro D, Vitagliano A, et al. Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa (DEB): How Can Pregnancy Alter the Course of This Rare Disease? An Updated Literature Review on Obstetrical Management with an Additional Italian Experience. Diseases. 2024; 12(5):104. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases12050104
Chicago/Turabian StyleVimercati, Antonella, Gerardo Cazzato, Lucia Lospalluti, Stefania Foligno, Cristina Taliento, Katarzyna Beata Trojanowska, Ettore Cicinelli, Domenico Bonamonte, Dario Caliandro, Amerigo Vitagliano, and et al. 2024. "Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa (DEB): How Can Pregnancy Alter the Course of This Rare Disease? An Updated Literature Review on Obstetrical Management with an Additional Italian Experience" Diseases 12, no. 5: 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases12050104
APA StyleVimercati, A., Cazzato, G., Lospalluti, L., Foligno, S., Taliento, C., Trojanowska, K. B., Cicinelli, E., Bonamonte, D., Caliandro, D., Vitagliano, A., & Nicolì, P. (2024). Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa (DEB): How Can Pregnancy Alter the Course of This Rare Disease? An Updated Literature Review on Obstetrical Management with an Additional Italian Experience. Diseases, 12(5), 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases12050104