Author: Casteloâ€Soccio, Leslie; Laraâ€Corrales, Irene; Paller, Amy S.; Bean, Eric; Rangu, Sneha; Oboite, Michelle; Flohr, Carsten; Ahmad, Reginaâ€Celeste; Calberg, Valerie; Gilliam, Amy; Pope, Elena; Reynolds, Sean; Sibbald, Cathryn; Shin, Helen T.; Berger, Emily; Schaffer, Julie; Siegel, Michael P.; Cordoro, Kelly M.
Title: Acral Changes in pediatric patients during COVID 19 pandemic: Registry report from the COVID 19 response task force of the society of pediatric dermatology (SPD) and pediatric dermatology research alliance (PeDRA) Cord-id: 2f7unbms Document date: 2021_3_20
ID: 2f7unbms
Snippet: BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: In spring 2020, high numbers of children presented with acral pernioâ€like skin rashes, concurrent with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic. Understanding their clinical characteristics/ infection status may provide prognostic information and facilitate decisions about management. METHODS: A pediatricâ€specific dermatology registry was created by the Pediatric Dermatology COVIDâ€19 Response Task Force of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology (SPD) and Pedi
Document: BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: In spring 2020, high numbers of children presented with acral pernioâ€like skin rashes, concurrent with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic. Understanding their clinical characteristics/ infection status may provide prognostic information and facilitate decisions about management. METHODS: A pediatricâ€specific dermatology registry was created by the Pediatric Dermatology COVIDâ€19 Response Task Force of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology (SPD) and Pediatric Dermatology Research Alliance (PeDRA) and was managed by Children's Hospital of Philadelphia using REDCap. RESULTS: Data from 378 children 0â€18 years entered into the registry between April 13 and July 17, 2020 were analyzed. Data were drawn from a standardized questionnaire completed by clinicians which asked for demographics, description of acral lesions, symptoms before and after acral changes, COVIDâ€19 positive contacts, treatment, duration of skin changes, laboratory testing including SARSâ€CoVâ€2 PCR and antibody testing, as well as histopathology. 229 (60.6%) were male with mean age of 13.0 years (± 3.6 years). Six (1.6%) tested positive for SARSâ€CoVâ€2. Pedal lesions (often with pruritus and/or pain) were present in 96%. 30% (114/378) had COVIDâ€19 symptoms during the 30 days prior to presentation. Most (69%) had no other symptoms and an uneventful course with complete recovery. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Children with acral pernioâ€like changes were healthy and all recovered with no shortâ€term sequelae. We believe these acral changes are not just a temporal epiphenomenon of shelter in place during the spring months of the first wave of the COVIDâ€19 pandemic and may be a late phase reaction that needs further study.
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