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Psoriasis, Cyclosporine, and Pregnancy

Stephen Wright, MA, MD, MRCP; Mary Glover, MRCP; Harvey Baker, MD, FRCP
Arch Dermatol. 1991;127(3):426. doi:10.1001/archderm.1991.01680030152030.
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To the Editor.—  Cyclosporine was first used in the prevention of organ graft rejection, but its potent immunosuppressive effects and apparent lack of bone marrow toxicity may make it suitable for a range of other diseases.1 Perhaps the best defined of these is psoriasis, and the drug is increasingly being used in treating this condition.2 Among the contraindications to treatment with cyclosporine is pregnancy. We report what, to our knowledge, is the first successful pregnancy in a patient taking cyclosporine for psoriasis.

Report of a Case.—  A 39-year-old woman first developed widespread guttate psoriasis at age 12 years. Despite many spells of inpatient treatment, she never obtained complete relief from symptoms, and treatment with methotrexate was started in 1973, after a normal liver biopsy. The course of her psoriasis remained troublesome and, at various times between 1973 and 1984, she was treated with hydroxyurea, razoxane, and photochemotherapy, without

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