Atrichia congenita
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Synopsis

Atrichia with papular lesions (APL) is a rare autosomal recessive syndrome associated with irreversible hair loss and widespread papular lesions. A mutation in the zinc finger domain of the human hairless HR gene on chromosome region 8p12 produces a dysplasia of the pilosebaceous system.
In APL, the proximal and outer root sheath of hair follicles undergoes apoptosis and disintegration at the end of the anagen phase. Patients are born with scalp and body hair but develop irreversible hair loss beginning at a few months of age, with a frontal to posterior progression on the scalp. In some cases, patients are born hairless. Papular lesions erupt within the first year of life, most prominently under the midline of the eye, face, and extremities. Papular lesions are made of keratin cysts associated with malformation of the pilosebaceous system.
In APL, the proximal and outer root sheath of hair follicles undergoes apoptosis and disintegration at the end of the anagen phase. Patients are born with scalp and body hair but develop irreversible hair loss beginning at a few months of age, with a frontal to posterior progression on the scalp. In some cases, patients are born hairless. Papular lesions erupt within the first year of life, most prominently under the midline of the eye, face, and extremities. Papular lesions are made of keratin cysts associated with malformation of the pilosebaceous system.
Codes
ICD10CM:
Q84.0 – Congenital alopecia
SNOMEDCT:
403798006 – Atrichia congenita
Q84.0 – Congenital alopecia
SNOMEDCT:
403798006 – Atrichia congenita
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Differential Diagnosis & Pitfalls
- Hereditary vitamin D-dependent rickets type 2A – An autosomal recessive disorder with gene mutations of vitamin D receptor. Patients have clinical and histopathological features identical to APL, ie, irreversible hair loss and papular lesions. These patients are distinguished by hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, normal calcidiol (25-hydroxyvitamin D) and elevated calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) levels, elevated alkaline phosphatase, hyperparathyroidism, osteomalacia, and rickets. Patients respond to supplementation with calcitriol and calcium.
- Alopecia universalis (see alopecia areata) – Alopecia with variable onset and possible reversal. Trichoscopy may show "yellow dots" (hyperkeratotic plugs), micro-exclamation mark hairs, and "black dots" (destroyed hairs in follicle opening). There are no papular lesions. Patients may respond to systemic treatments.
- Oral-facial-digital syndrome – An X-linked dominant ectodermal dysplastic syndrome with congenital papular lesions and hypotrichosis. Patients also present with cleft lip / palate, hypoplastic alae nasi, brachydactyly, and intellectual disability and are at risk for polycystic kidney disease.
- Schöpf-Schulz-Passarge syndrome – An ectodermal dysplasia of unknown inheritance with congenital papular lesions and hypotrichosis. Patients are known for developing palmoplantar keratoderma, hypodontia, furrowed nails, and multiple eyelid apocrine hidrocystoma.
- Generalized basaloid follicular hamartoma syndrome – An autosomal dominant disease with congenital or early-onset pigmented papular lesions and hypotrichosis. Patients also have palmoplantar pits, follicular hamartomas, comedones, and acrochordons and are at risk for basal cell carcinoma, systemic lupus erythematosus, antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, cystic fibrosis, and/or myasthenia gravis.
- Bazex-Dupré-Christol syndrome – An X-linked dominant disease with congenital hypotrichosis and early-onset papular lesions. Patients also present with follicular atrophoderma, comedones, hidradenitis suppurativa, hair shaft anomaly (eg, trichoepithelioma), and basal cell carcinoma.
- Rombo syndrome – An autosomal dominant disease with late-onset hypotrichosis and papular lesions beginning at about 7-10 years of age. Patients also present with vermiculate atrophoderma, peripheral vasodilatation, telangiectasia, trichoepithelioma, and basal cell carcinoma.
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Last Updated:05/10/2022