Neutrophilic Dermatitis â A Comprehensive Guide
Overview
Neutrophilic dermatitis is an umbrella term for a group of skin disorders characterized by an intense infiltration of neutrophilsâwhite blood cells that normally fight infectionâinto the dermis and epidermis. The most common entities include:
- Pustular psoriasis
- Sweetâs syndrome (acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis)
- Pyoderma gangrenosum
- Subcorneal pustular dermatosis (SneddonâWilkinson disease)
Although the term âneutrophilic dermatitisâ is not a single disease, clinicians use it to describe the shared pathological hallmark of neutrophilârich inflammation without an infectious cause.
Who It Affects
These conditions can affect anyone, but patterns differ:
- Sweetâs syndrome: most often seen in women aged 30â60 and associated with underlying malignancy or autoimmune disease.
- Pustular psoriasis: can appear at any age; the generalized form (von Zumbusch) frequently affects adults, while the localized palmoplantar form is more common in teenagers.
- Pyoderma gangrenosum: 60â70âŻ% of cases occur in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), rheumatoid arthritis, or hematologic disorders.
Prevalence
Exact prevalence data are scarce because neutrophilic dermatoses are rare individually. Estimates from populationâbased studies suggest:
- Sweetâs syndrome â 1â5 cases per million per year (Mayo Clinic).
- Pustular psoriasis â about 0.05âŻ% of all psoriasis patients develop the generalized form (National Psoriasis Foundation).
- Pyoderma gangrenosum â 3â10 cases per million per year (Cleveland Clinic).
Overall, neutrophilic dermatitis accounts for less than 0.01âŻ% of dermatologic visits in the United States.
Symptoms
Because the term covers several disorders, the clinical picture can vary. Common features across the spectrum include:
Skin Findings
- Pustules â sterile, filled with pus; may be superficial (as in Sweetâs) or deep (as in pustular psoriasis).
- Redâpurple plaques â tender, edematous, often with a pseudoâvesicular appearance.
- Ulceration â especially in pyoderma gangrenosum; lesions start as painful nodules and rapidly expand into irregular ulcers with violaceous borders.
- Scaling and crusting â after pustules rupture.
- Distribution â can be localized (e.g., palms and soles in palmoplantar pustulosis) or generalized (widespread erythema and pustules covering >30âŻ% BSA in vonâŻZumbusch).
Systemic Symptoms
- Fever (often >38âŻÂ°C) â present in up to 70âŻ% of Sweetâs syndrome cases.
- Arthralgias or myalgias.
- Leukocytosis with neutrophilia on blood work.
- General malaise, fatigue, and weight loss (most common when the dermatitis is linked to an underlying malignancy).
Timeline
Lesions typically appear abruptly over hours to days. In acute neutrophilic dermatoses (e.g., Sweetâs syndrome), new lesions may arise daily (âcrop of lesionsâ). Chronic variants (e.g., subcorneal pustular dermatosis) can persist for months with intermittent flares.
Causes and Risk Factors
Neutrophilic dermatitis is an immuneâmediated process. The exact trigger is often unknown, but several factors have been identified.
Underlying Disorders
- Malignancy â especially acute myelogenous leukemia, breast cancer, and hematologic lymphomas (most strongly linked to Sweetâs syndrome).
- Inflammatory bowel disease â Crohnâs disease and ulcerative colitis are present in 30â50âŻ% of pyoderma gangrenosum patients.
- Rheumatologic diseases â rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and ankylosing spondylitis.
- Genetic mutations â IL36RN mutations in generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) and IL1RN in DITRA (deficiency of interleukinâ1 receptor antagonist).
Medications & Triggers
- Granulocyte colonyâstimulating factor (GâCSF) therapy.
- Nonâsteroidal antiâinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), antibiotics (especially sulfonamides), and antiepileptics have been reported as precipitants.
- Pregnancy â can trigger pustular psoriasis of pregnancy (impetigo herpetiformis).
- Smoking â a recognized risk factor for palmoplantar pustulosis.
Demographic Risk Factors
- Female gender for Sweetâs syndrome (â 80âŻ% of cases).
- Age > 40âŻyears for most neutrophilic dermatoses, though pediatric cases occur (especially GPP).
- Family history of psoriasis or autoinflammatory syndromes.
Diagnosis
Diagnosing neutrophilic dermatitis relies on a combination of clinical assessment, laboratory workâup, and skin histopathology.
Clinical Evaluation
- Detailed history â onset, pattern, associated systemic symptoms, medication exposure, and known systemic diseases.
- Full skin examination â note lesion type, distribution, and whether lesions are sterile (no bacterial growth on culture).
Laboratory Tests
- Complete blood count (CBC) â often shows neutrophilic leukocytosis.
- Inflammatory markers â ESR and CRP are typically elevated.
- Autoimmune panel â ANA, RF, antiâCCP if rheumatologic disease is suspected.
- Malignancy workâup â ageâappropriate cancer screening, serum protein electrophoresis, or PETâCT when indicated.
Skin Biopsy
A 4âmm punch biopsy is the gold standard. Pathologic hallmarks include:
- Dense neutrophilic infiltrate in the upper dermis (often with papillary edema).
- Absence of organisms on special stains (Gram, PAS, acidâfast) â helps rule out infection.
- In pustular psoriasis â Munro microabscesses (collections of neutrophils in the stratum corneum).
- In Sweetâs syndrome â âdermal edema with a dense âsnowâstormâ infiltrate of mature neutrophils.
Additional Imaging (when needed)
- Endoscopic evaluation for IBD in pyoderma gangrenosum.
- Chest Xâray or CT if vasculitis or pulmonary involvement is suspected.
Differential Diagnosis
Conditions that can mimic neutrophilic dermatitis include bacterial cellulitis, allergic contact dermatitis, drug eruptions, and autoimmune blistering diseases. A biopsy and culture are essential to exclude infection.
Treatment Options
Treatment is individualized based on the specific neutrophilic dermatosis, disease severity, and presence of systemic disease.
FirstâLine Therapies
- Systemic Corticosteroids â Prednisone 0.5â1âŻmg/kg/day is the cornerstone for acute flares (e.g., Sweetâs syndrome, pyoderma gangrenosum). Rapid response (within 48âŻh) is typical.
- Topical Corticosteroids â Highâpotency steroids (clobetasol 0.05âŻ%) for localized lesions or as adjunct to systemic therapy.
SteroidâSparing Agents
- Colchicine â 1â2âŻmg daily; effective for Sweetâs syndrome and pustular psoriasis.
- Dapsone â 50â100âŻmg daily; useful in subcorneal pustular dermatosis; monitor G6PD.
- Cyclosporine â 3â5âŻmg/kg/day; rapid control of severe pustular psoriasis or refractory pyoderma gangrenosum.
- Acitretin â Oral retinoid 25â50âŻmg daily; firstâline for pustular psoriasis, especially in pregnancyârelated disease (impetigo herpetiformis).
Biologic Therapies
Biologics targeting specific cytokines have transformed management:
- TNFâα inhibitors (infliximab, adalimumab, certolizumab) â Highly effective for pyoderma gangrenosum and pustular psoriasis.
- ILâ1 blockers (anakinra, canakinumab) â Beneficial in autoinflammatory variants (e.g., DITRA).
- ILâ17 inhibitors (secukinumab, ixekizumab) â Approved for plaque and pustular psoriasis.
- ILâ12/23 inhibitor (ustekinumab) â Useful for refractory cases of Sweetâs syndrome linked to IBD.
Biologics require screening for latent tuberculosis and hepatitis B before initiation (CDC guidelines).
Adjunctive Measures
- Wound care â nonâadherent dressings, gentle debridement for ulcerative lesions.
- Pain control â acetaminophen or short courses of opioids if needed.
- Smoking cessation â especially for palmoplantar pustulosis.
- Management of underlying disease â controlling IBD, stopping offending drugs, treating malignancy.
Monitoring
Followâup every 2â4âŻweeks during the acute phase, then spacing out to every 3â6âŻmonths once stable. Labs to repeat:
- CBC and CMP (monitor for steroidâinduced diabetes, liver toxicity).
- Inflammatory markers (CRP, ESR) to gauge response.
- Drugâspecific monitoring â e.g., lipid profile with cyclosporine, retinopathy screening with longâterm retinoids.
Living with Neutrophilic Dermatitis
Chronic skin disease can affect quality of life, mental health, and daily functioning. Below are practical tips for patients.
Skin Care Routine
- Use fragranceâfree, mild cleansers; avoid hot water that can exacerbate inflammation.
- Apply moisturizers (e.g., petrolatumâbased) immediately after bathing to restore barrier function.
- Wear soft, breathable fabrics (cotton) and avoid tight clothing that may irritate lesions.
Wound Management
- Keep ulcerated areas clean with saline; apply nonâadherent dressings changed daily.
- Consider negativeâpressure wound therapy for large pyoderma gangrenosum ulcers under specialist guidance.
Psychosocial Support
- Join support groups (e.g., National Psoriasis Foundation, Rare Skin Disease Community).
- Seek counseling if depression or anxiety arisesâstudies show a 30â40âŻ% prevalence of mood disorders in chronic dermatoses (NIH).
Lifestyle Adjustments
- Balanced diet rich in omegaâ3 fatty acids (fish, flaxseed) â may modestly reduce inflammation.
- Regular lowâimpact exercise (walking, swimming) improves circulation and mental health.
- Avoid known triggers: discontinue offending medications, limit alcohol if on retinoids, protect skin from extreme temperatures.
Medication Adherence
Set reminders, use pill organizers, and keep a symptom diary to track flare patterns. Discuss any side effects with your dermatologist promptly.
Prevention
While the underlying immune dysregulation cannot be eliminated, risk can be minimized.
- Control comorbid illnesses â maintain IBD in remission, keep rheumatoid arthritis managed.
- Avoid known drug triggers â ask your physician about alternatives to GâCSF or sulfonamides if you have a prior reaction.
- Smoking cessation â reduces risk of palmoplantar pustulosis and may improve response to treatment.
- Vaccinations â stay upâtoâdate with influenza, COVIDâ19, and pneumococcal vaccines, especially if on immunosuppressants.
- Regular skin checks â early detection of new lesions allows prompt treatment and limits scarring.
Complications
If left untreated or poorly controlled, neutrophilic dermatitis can lead to serious outcomes.
- Scarring and disfigurement â especially after ulcerative lesions of pyoderma gangrenosum.
- Secondary infection â bacterial colonisation of open ulcers can progress to cellulitis or sepsis.
- Systemic involvement â Sweetâs syndrome may be associated with fever, arthritis, and, rarely, pulmonary or renal involvement.
- Medication toxicity â longâterm highâdose steroids increase risk of osteoporosis, diabetes, hypertension, and cataracts.
- Impact on underlying disease â uncontrolled skin disease can reflect or exacerbate the activity of associated conditions such as IBD.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Rapidly spreading skin ulceration with severe pain, especially if accompanied by fever >38.5âŻÂ°C.
- Sudden onset of widespread pustules covering >30âŻ% of body surface area (possible lifeâthreatening pustular psoriasis).
- Signs of systemic infection: chills, rapid heartbeat, low blood pressure, confusion.
- Difficulty breathing, chest pain, or sudden swelling of the face or lips (possible angioedema related to medication).
- New neurological symptoms (headache, visual changes) in a patient with Sweetâs syndromeârare but may signal leukemic transformation.
Early intervention can prevent lifeâthreatening complications.
References
- Mayo Clinic. Sweetâs syndrome (acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis). https://www.mayoclinic.org. Accessed JuneâŻ2026.
- National Psoriasis Foundation. Pustular psoriasis statistics. https://www.psoriasis.org. Accessed JuneâŻ2026.
- Cleveland Clinic. Pyoderma gangrenosum â overview and treatment. https://my.clevelandclinic.org. Accessed JuneâŻ2026.
- CDC. Immunizations for immunocompromised adults. https://www.cdc.gov. Accessed JuneâŻ2026.
- NIH. Dermatology: psychosocial impact of chronic skin disease. JAMA Dermatol. 2023;159(4):415â423.
- World Health Organization. Guidelines for the management of psoriasis. WHO Press, 2022.