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Maculopapular eruptions associated to COVID-19: A subanalysis of the COVID-Piel study.

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Date

2020-09-09

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Català, Alba
Galván-Casas, Cristina
Carretero-Hernández, Gregorio
Rodríguez-Jiménez, Pedro
Fernández-Nieto, Daniel
Rodríguez-Villa, Ana
Navarro-Fernández, Íñigo
Ruiz-Villaverde, Ricardo
Falkenhain-López, Daniel
Llamas-Velasco, Mar

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A previous study has defined the maculopapular subtype of manifestations of COVID-19. The objective of our study was to describe and classify maculopapular eruptions associated with COVI-19. We carried out a subanalysis of the maculopapular cases found in the previous cross-sectional study. Using a consensus, we defined seven clinical patterns. We described patient demographics, the therapy received by the patient and the characteristics of each pattern. Consensus lead to the description of seven major maculopapular patterns: morbilliform (45.5%), other maculopapular (20.0%), purpuric (14.2%), erythema multiforme-like (9.7%), pytiriasis rosea-like (5.7%), erythema elevatum diutinum-like (2.3%), and perifollicular (2.3%). In most cases, maculopapular eruptions were coincident (61.9%) or subsequent (34.1%) to the onset of other COVID-19 manifestations. The most frequent were cough (76%), dyspnea (72%), fever (88%), and astenia (62%). Hospital admission due to pneumonia was frequent (61%). Drug intake was frequent (78%). Laboratory alterations associated with maculo-papular eruptions were high C-reactive protein, high D-Dimer, lymphopenia, high ferritin, high LDH, and high IL-6. The main limitation of our study was the impossibility to define the cause-effect relationship of each pattern. In conclusion, we provide a description of the cutaneous maculopapular manifestations associated with COVID-19. The cutaneous manifestations of COVID-19 are wide-ranging and can mimic other dermatoses.

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Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Antiviral Agents
COVID-19
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Host-Pathogen Interactions
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Risk Factors
SARS-CoV-2
Skin
Skin Diseases, Viral
Spain
Young Adult
COVID-19 Drug Treatment

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Keywords

COVID-19, coronavirus, cutaneous manifestations, skin

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