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Rheumatology 1999;38:453–456 Porphyria cutanea tarda affecting a rheumatoid arthritis patient treated with methotrexate: association or coincidence? P. Chalem, A.-M. Ghnassia1, Y. Nordmann2 and C. J. Menkes Department of Rheumatology, Hôpital Cochin, Paris, 11 avenue du Maréchal de Lattre de Tassigny, 77400 Lagny and 2Centre Français des Porphyries, Hôpital Louis Mourier, Colombes, France Abstract We describe the case of a 44-yr-old woman, suffering from rheumatoid arthritis for 15 yr, who developed porphyria cutanea tarda while being treated with methotrexate. The cutaneous lesions healed and the metabolic anomalies improved after a few months, despite continuing the treatment. K : Porphyria cutanea tarda, Rheumatoid arthritis, Methotrexate. T 2. Classification of porphyrias according to their inheritance The term ‘porphyria’ is used to describe a group of diseases with very diverse clinical manifestations, but which share a common feature: abnormalities of porphyrin metabolism. Porphyrins are compounds which are intermediates in haem metabolism [1]. There is currently no completely satisfactory classification system for porphyria, as the various forms differ as regards the site of the metabolic dysfunction ( liver or erythropoietic cells) ( Table 1), the mode of transmission (there are both dominant and recessive hereditary forms, and acquired or sporadic forms) (Table 2), the clinical manifestations (cutaneous, abdominal, neurological and psychological ) and the enzyme which is defective ( Table 3) [1]. However, these taxonomic difficulties do not prevent satisfactory differentiation between the major clinical forms. One of these major Autosomal dominant Protoporphyria Porphyria cutanea tardaa Acute intermittent porphyria Variegate porphyria Hereditary coproporphyria Autosomal recessive Hepatoerythropoietic porphyria Congenital erythropoietic porphyria ALA dehydrase deficiency aAlso acquired or ‘sporadic’ form. forms, porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT ), can be identified by its clinical presentation: cutaneous hyperfragility, light sensitivity and serous or haemorrhagic blisters mostly on exposed skin (backs of the hands and face) with only minimal trauma. PCT is the only form of porphyria that can be acquired (‘sporadic’ form), and thus it is not necessarily hereditary. It involves a deficit in uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase, with accumulation and excessive elimination of uroporphyrins I and III in urine, and high levels of isocoproporphyrin in stools. PCT is often associated with exposure to triggering factors (particularly alcohol, iron, oestrogens, aromatic hydrocarbons) and also various diseases including hepatitis and autoimmune diseases [1]. The autoimmune disease most often reported to be associated with PCT is lupus erythematosus [2–9]. In contrast, there have been only three reports of PCT associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) [10–12]. In the most recent one [12], the onset of PCT was described as being associated with the start of methotrexate administration. We report an observation which is inconsistent with this previously suggested causative relationship. T 1. Classification of porphyrias according to the site of metabolic dysfunction Hepatic porphyrias Acute intermittent porphyria Variegate porphyria Porphyria cutanea tarda Hereditary coproporphyria ALA dehydrase deficiency Erythropoietic porphyrias Congenital erythropoietic porphyria Protoporphyria Hepatoerythropoietic porphyria Submitted 18 February 1998; revised version accepted 31 December 1998. Correspondence to: C. J. Menkes, Service de Rhumatologie A, Hôpital Cochin, 27, Rue de Faubourg Saint-Jacques, 75014 Paris, France. 453 © 1999 British Society for Rheumatology 454 P. Chalem et al. T 3. Classification of porphyrias according to the clinical manifestations and the defective enzyme Clinical features Cutaneous photosensitivity Neurological dysfunction Photosensitivity and neurological dysfunction Disease Defective enzyme Congenital erythropoietic porphyria Porphyria cutanea tarda Hepatoerythropoietic porphyria Protoporphyria ALA dehydrase deficiency Acute intermittent porphyria Hereditary coproporphyria Variegate porphyria Uroporphyrinogen III synthase Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase Ferrochelatase ALA dehydrase Porphobilinogen deaminase Coproporphyrinogen oxidase Protoporphyrinogen oxidase Modified from Wyckoff and Kushner [19]. Case report The patient was a woman, 44 yr old, who had been suffering from RA for 15 yr (since 1981). The sites affected, from the onset of the disease, were the minor joints (metacarpophalangeal, proximal interphalangeal and metatarsophalangeal ). She was treated, successively, with gold salts (stopped after 3 months due to a cutaneous eruption), hydroxychloroquine for 18 months (stopped because of lack of efficacy) and -penicillamine from 1985 to 1991 (stopped following therapeutic failure). Since 1991, methotrexate therapy, initially 7.5 mg/week, increased in 1995 to 10 mg/week, has been effective. She also receives 75–150 mg/day of indomethacin. The patient was hospitalized and administered methylprednisolone i.v. therapy, 500 mg/day for 3 days, for major inflammatory episodes in 1988, 1989 and 1994. Hand and feet X-rays showed erosions of the metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints. Rheumatoid factor was positive (ELISA IgM anti-IgG: 200 IU/ml, Rose–Waaler titre: 64). She had been taking oral contraception (norgestrel 0.50 mg + ethinyloestradiol 0.05 mg/day) for 20 yr. In August 1996, she noticed the appearance of vesicles and bullous lesions on the backs of her hands and face, followed by superficial erosions with the development of crusts and a small number of hypopigmented and atrophic scars. The clinical signs suggested PCT, and the diagnosis was confirmed by assaying urinary porphyrins: the uroporphyrin concentration was 334 nmol/mmol of creatinine (normal: <10), or 3607 nmol/l (normal: <50); 5-aminolaevulinic acid, porphobilinogen and coproporphyrin levels were normal. The porphyrin concentration in stools (229 ng/g dry weight) was slightly higher than normal (<200 nmol/g) and erythrocyte counts were normal. Liver investigations revealed normal values: aspartate amino transferase 23 IU/l, alanine amino transferase 41 IU/l, alkaline phosphatase 58 IU/l, gamma glutamyl transferase 34 IU/l and 5∞ nucleotidase 2 IU/l. Serum iron was normal (94 mg%). As PCT is known to be associated with systemic lupus erythematosus, we tested ANA serology, which was positive (1:500, speckled pattern). Anti-double-stranded (ds) DNA, anti-ENA and anti-Scl-70 were all negative. Oestro-progestational contraception was halted imme- diately upon diagnosis, but methotrexate and indomethacin treatments were continued. The evolution of the skin disease was favourable, and the bullous lesions disappeared within a few weeks. Porphyrin assays 3 months after the first such assays revealed that the concentration of uroporphyrins had declined to 259 nmol/nmol of creatinine (1245 nmol/l ). Six months after the first assay, the porphyrin levels were normal. To date, after 24 months of follow-up, there has been no further episode of cutaneous lesions, despite the continuation of methotrexate therapy. Discussion Our patient presented a well-known risk factor for PCT: taking oestro-progestational contraceptives [13]. In spite of this, the case raises two questions. First, was RA involved in the development of the metabolic abnormality and, second, was methotrexate therapy in any way responsible? As noted previously, the association between PCT and systemic lupus erythematosus seems to be evident in view of the numerous papers published. However, the association with other autoimmune diseases, including RA, is not as obvious as that with lupus [10–12, 14, 15]. In 1972, Eales and co-workers [10] described a 64-yrold woman who had been suffering from RA for 40 yr and Felty syndrome. She developed PCT during her last 3 yr of life, with recurrent blisters and erosions on the sun-exposed skin surfaces with minimal trauma. There was no family history of cutaneous porphyria. Clinical examination revealed hepatomegaly; however, no abnormal findings were revealed either by enzymology or hepatic biopsy. The patient eventually died as a result of a severe pulmonary infection, certainly related to the persistent neutropenia and the multiple portals of infection located in the porphyric skin lesions. At autopsy, there was hepatic congestion, focal fatty changes, slight portal fibrosis and minimal siderosis; under ultraviolet light, there was evidence of widespread fluorescence, a characteristic finding indicating the presence of porphyrins. Liquid chromatography showed the presence of 7- and 8-carboxyl porphyrins. In the same year, Nyman [11] reported a male patient, 49 yr old, suffering from PCT, bronchial cancer and RA. There was a family history of porphyria. Moreover, Porphyria cutanea tarda and methotrexate this patient presented a risk factor for developing PCT: he was a chronic alcoholic. However, the diagnosis of RA was questionable, and the author also suggested that polymyalgia rheumatica was a possible diagnosis; it could also have been a paraneoplastic syndrome. Thus, these two former reports do not demonstrate any relationship between PCT and RA. More recently, O’Neill and co-workers [12] published a third paper, where they report the case of a 69-yr-old woman suffering from RA for >20 yr and who had been administered several types of treatment, each discontinued because of either lack of efficacy or side-effects. She developed a sporadic form of PCT 2 weeks after starting methotrexate (total dose 15 mg). In her past medical history, there were no risk factors for PCT (exposure to oestrogens, hydrocarbons or excess alcohol intake). The authors concluded that the methotrexate treatment had caused the PCT [12]. In two other reports, Malina et al. [16 ] and Dopfer et al. [17] suggest a link between the administration of methotrexate and PCT. However, the causative association described in these reports is unlikely. In one case, methotrexate had been administered to a patient with psoriatic erythroderma a long time (7 yr) before the onset of porphyria [16 ]. The other case was a 6-yr-old girl with a family history of porphyria who developed PCT after bone marrow transplantation for chronic myelogenous leukaemia; she had received methotrexate and also cyclophosphamide [17], a drug which is liable to reveal porphyria [13]. A detailed review of the mechanisms by which drugs can trigger porphyria is beyond the scope of this paper. However, it is important to underline some aspects of hepatic porphyrin metabolism and its drug-induced disturbances. The biosynthesis of porphyrins involves eight enzymes and occurs in both mitochondria and cytoplasm [1, 18, 19]. The condensation of succinyl coenzyme A and citric acid, mediated by the enzyme ALA synthase, allows the synthesis of d-aminolaevulinic acid (ALA). This is the first and, at least in the liver, the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of porphyrins. ALA synthase is directly inhibited by the final product, haem [18]. Because this biosynthetic pathway is complex, it is convenient to divide it into four separate steps: (1) formation of the pyrrole rings; (2) assembly of macrocyclic tetrapyrrole; (3) modification of the peripheral side chains; (4) oxidation of protoporphyrinogen IX to protoporphyrin IX and the insertion of iron to form the haem molecule [19]. Thus, porphyrins are composed of four pyrrole rings and are the intermediate chemical compounds in the haem biosynthetic pathway. The liver is a major site of haem production: it synthesizes 15–20% of total body haem, half of which is used in the synthesis of cytochromes P-450 [18]. The liver is also important in the excretion of porphyrins; this can result in liver damage caused by porphyrin accumulation in certain types of porphyrias (e.g. PCT ) [18, 20]. Because porphyrins are secreted in bile, various hepatocellular or cholestatic liver diseases are associated 455 with increased urinary levels of porphyrins. However, this phenomenon is not characterized by clinical manifestations of porphyria [18]. There are a wide variety of porphyria-related drugs, most of which are thought to induce cytochrome P-450 and thus to increase the demand for hepatic haem biosynthesis, thereby increasing the rate of formation of porphyrins. A deficit or abnormal function in one enzyme of this metabolic pathway will cause the excessive accumulation and excretion of porphyrins and porphyrin precursors [13]. As previously noted, PCT involves a deficit in uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase activity with accumulation of uroporphyrins I and III. In sporadic PCT (as in our patient), only the hepatic enzyme is involved; red cell haem metabolism remains normal in such cases [1]. There are three pathways for methotrexate metabolism, none of which appear to be related to porphyrins or haem products. First, methotrexate can be inactivated by intestinal bacteria; this inactivation accounts for <5% of the total dose. Second, the drug is metabolized by aldehyde oxidase to 7-hydroxy-methotrexate, a less active metabolite. Third, methotrexate and 7-hydroxymethotrexate are transformed to polyglutamate derivatives, which exhibit a more powerful and prolonged activity [21–23]. Therefore, hepatic methotrexate metabolism does not involve cytochromes P-450; current theory does not indicate how this drug could be able to induce porphyrias. Experiments in animal models (especially in rats and chick embryo) are useful to demonstrate the ability of a drug to induce porphyrin synthesis. The correlation between the experimental findings and clinical evidence is good: indeed, drugs known to induce porphyria are found to be associated with a rise in porphyrin biosynthesis in chick embryo; on the other hand, harmless drugs in patients with porphyria usually give negative results in models. Experimental tests demonstrated that methotrexate has no effect on porphyrin metabolism [13]. Some authorized and unauthorized drugs in patients with hepatic porphyrias are listed in Table 4. Another matter of interest is whether liver disease related to methotrexate can induce disturbances in porphyrin metabolism. Porphyrin excretion does not appear to have been measured in patients with methotrexate hepatotoxicity; thus, secondary porphyrinuria, attrib- T 4. Drugs and hepatic porphyrias Authorized Acetylsalicylic acid Cyclosporin Diclofenac Indomethacin Ketoprofen Methotrexate Naproxen Piroxicam Tenoxicam Unauthorized Mephenamic acid Choroquine Cyclophosphamide Danazol Ibuprofen Oestrogens Paracetamol Progestin 456 P. Chalem et al. uted to methotrexate-related advanced liver disease, has not yet been reported [24–28]. In conclusion, PCT seems to be a disease only fortuitously associated with RA. Methotrexate, at least at the doses used in rheumatology and despite its effects on the liver, does not appear to be contraindicated in patients with PCT; there is, therefore, no reason to avoid its use. In our patient, the metabolic anomaly and the cutaneous lesions disappeared despite continuing methotrexate therapy. References 1. Mascaro JM. Les porphyries. In: Saurat JH, Grosshans E, Laugier P, Lachapelle JM, eds. Précis de dermatologie et vénéorologie. Fribourg: Masson, 1986:294–302. 2. Cram DL, Epstein JH, Tuffanelli DL. 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