Hidradenitis Suppuritiva

  • Admittedly we are not dermatologists… but hydradenitis suppuritiva (HS) affects a substantial number of our patients and because of the locations it affects, OB/GYNs are often the first to see it.

What is HS?

  • Chronic, recurrent inflammatory disease of apocrine sweat glands

    • Also known as acne inversa 

    • Located usually in axillae, groin, genitals, perineal, buttocks, and inframammary areas 

    • Women tend to be more affected than men  

  • Prevalence 

    • 1%-4%, onset usually between puberty - 40 years of age, usually in second or third decade of life 

  • Why do we care?

    • Can cause significant pain, issues with scarring 

    • May have huge impact on self-esteem and quality of life can be severe, thus importance of early diagnosis and treatment 

    • Very rarely, squamous cell carcinomas develop within sites of HS 

How do we recognize it and diagnose it? 

Pathogenesis 

  • Follicular occlusion is most likely the even that is responsible for the initial development of HS lesions; may be due to ductal keratinocyte proliferation  → hyperkeratosis and plugging 

  • There is then follicular rupture → formation of sinus tracts

  • Associated factors

    • Genetics

    • Mechanical stress (ie. pressure, friction, etc.),

    • Obesity (maybe...but it’s also present in those without obesity),

    • Smoking (strong correlation; majority of affected patients are smokers),

    • Hormones (some people may experience perimenstrual flares)  

  • History and Physical exam 

    • Typical lesions, typical locations, relapses and chronicity 

    • Inflammatory nodules - first lesion is single, painful, deep-seated inflamed nodule in the intertriginous area; diagnosis is usually missed at his stage; can be diagnosed as a “boil” or furunculosis 

      • After some time, the nodule can progress to form an abscess → may open to skin surface spontaneously 

      • Pain usually improves after drainage 

    • Sinus tracts - skin tunnels; can happen if HS is persistent for months or years; can release blood-stained, seropurulent, malodorous discharge periodically 

    • Comedones - can appear with longstanding HS 

    • Scarring - healed areas can have individual, pitted, acneiform scars; may be atrophic or keloidal 

  • Lab studies - usually not needed, but if you’re uncertain, can do skin biopsy → r/o squamous cell carcinoma 

  • Differential Diagnosis 

    • Folliculitis, acne vulgaris, pilonidal disease, Crohn disease 

Stage II disease — image courtesy of Wikimedia commons.

Stage II disease — image courtesy of Wikimedia commons.

Stage III disease with active infection ongoing -- image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Stage III disease with active infection ongoing -- image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

What is the Hurley Staging System? - divides patients with HS into three disease severity groups:

  • Stage I: Abscess formation (single or multiple) without sinus tracts and cicatrization/scarring 

  • Stage II: Recurrent abscesses with sinuses tracts and scarring, single or multiple widely separated lesions 

  • Stage III: Diffuse or almost diffuse involvement, or multiple interconnected sinus tracts and abscesses across the entire area.

How do we manage HS, and when should we refer out? 

  • Goals

    • Reduce formation of new areas, sinus tracts, and scarring 

    • Treat existing lesions and reduce symptoms 

    • Minimize psychological morbidity 

  • For all patients 

    • Education, psychological support if needed - it’s a chronic disease, not due to poor hygiene. Course can vary from person to person 

    • Wound and skin care techniques 

    • Pain management - NSAIDS usually, but discuss opioid analgesia if needed 

    • Treat associated symptoms and conditions 

    • Encourage smoking cessation if they smoke 

  • Stage I - Aim is to reduce burden of disease  

    • Topical clindamycin - can reduce inflammatory lesions; usually applied 2x/day 

    • If fail topical therapy → oral therapy

      • Oral tetracyclines: 100 mg doxycycline daily or BID

        • If oral antibiotic therapy achieves good disease control, patients can stop and continue with topical clindamycin for maintenance

      • Antiandrogenic agents - spironolactone and finasteride; can be used, but they should NOT be given if there is possibility patient is pregnant  

      • Oral contraceptives - very small study that showed some improvement 

      • Metformin - can help promote weight loss, which can help HS

    • For acute symptomatic lesions - warm compress 

      • May want to refer out for this: possibility of intralesional corticosteroid injections 

      • Unroofing the area over the nodule 

      • I&D - not advised for routine treatment. It can lead to immediate relief, but can promote lesion recurrence and scarring 

  • Stage II and III - Can try everything above, but if not working, usually this is when we would say you should refer out for other treatments 

    • If they don’t achieve good control with antibiotics, metformin or antiandrogenic therapy, may require oral retinoids, dapsone and biologics 

      • We’ll mention some, but we won’t go into detail, since we don’t really do this stuff as Ob/Gyns 

    • Oral retinoids - may only have limited benefit 

    • Oral dapsone - sulfone drug with immunomodulatory and antibacterial properties 

    • Adalimumab - FDA approved treatment for moderate to severe HS 

    • Acute symptomatic lesions: oral glucocorticoids may also be used 

    • For severe, refractory disease 

      • Wide excision - extensive surgical intervention can get to greatest likelihood for resolution of active inflammation, but can be disfiguring and involve a prolonged recovery time.