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An unusual case of cutaneous tuberculosis and paradoxical TB in a patient with spondyloarthritis treated with adalimumab

An unusual case of cutaneous tuberculosis and paradoxical TB in a patient with spondyloarthritis treated with adalimumab
An unusual case of cutaneous tuberculosis and paradoxical TB in a patient with spondyloarthritis treated with adalimumab
Cutaneous tuberculosis (TB) is an uncommon condition, the diagnosis of which can be challenging. Biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) are associated with a higher risk of opportunistic infections, including TB. We present a case of cutaneous TB in a 56-year-old male with psoriatic arthritis on adalimumab. He developed skin lesions on his thumb and axilla, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis was isolated in cultures sent from a skin biopsy. Four months after commencement of TB treatment, he presented with a new onset of seizures. An MRI head showed two tuberculomas, with no further lesions identified in cross-sectional imaging. A tapering course of steroids was started alongside a 12-month course of anti-TB treatment for post-tuberculous treatment paradoxical reaction. In conclusion, although uncommon, cutaneous TB should be considered in patients on bDMARD treatment with atypical skin lesions.
299-301
Garcia Fernandez, Antia
9fa33d18-eece-4533-b4bc-848d9fe4ea5b
Sinclair, Alice
f9e5debe-6d17-49d7-90e4-d8831fea1682
Elkington, Paul
60828c7c-3d32-47c9-9fcc-6c4c54c35a15
Rosser, Andrew
ee24f5bb-458f-405f-9412-bfce7ff7f530
Wallis, Dinny
72e31292-a3ad-4a5e-a3db-59211b4f9458
Garcia Fernandez, Antia
9fa33d18-eece-4533-b4bc-848d9fe4ea5b
Sinclair, Alice
f9e5debe-6d17-49d7-90e4-d8831fea1682
Elkington, Paul
60828c7c-3d32-47c9-9fcc-6c4c54c35a15
Rosser, Andrew
ee24f5bb-458f-405f-9412-bfce7ff7f530
Wallis, Dinny
72e31292-a3ad-4a5e-a3db-59211b4f9458

Garcia Fernandez, Antia, Sinclair, Alice, Elkington, Paul, Rosser, Andrew and Wallis, Dinny (2025) An unusual case of cutaneous tuberculosis and paradoxical TB in a patient with spondyloarthritis treated with adalimumab. Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, 55 (4), 299-301. (doi:10.1177/14782715251401766).

Record type: Letter

Abstract

Cutaneous tuberculosis (TB) is an uncommon condition, the diagnosis of which can be challenging. Biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) are associated with a higher risk of opportunistic infections, including TB. We present a case of cutaneous TB in a 56-year-old male with psoriatic arthritis on adalimumab. He developed skin lesions on his thumb and axilla, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis was isolated in cultures sent from a skin biopsy. Four months after commencement of TB treatment, he presented with a new onset of seizures. An MRI head showed two tuberculomas, with no further lesions identified in cross-sectional imaging. A tapering course of steroids was started alongside a 12-month course of anti-TB treatment for post-tuberculous treatment paradoxical reaction. In conclusion, although uncommon, cutaneous TB should be considered in patients on bDMARD treatment with atypical skin lesions.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 27 November 2025
Published date: December 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508348
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508348
PURE UUID: 0968218f-cb76-42a8-9a13-752a2fc4116d
ORCID for Paul Elkington: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0390-0613

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Date deposited: 19 Jan 2026 17:40
Last modified: 20 Jan 2026 02:45

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Contributors

Author: Antia Garcia Fernandez
Author: Alice Sinclair
Author: Paul Elkington ORCID iD
Author: Andrew Rosser
Author: Dinny Wallis

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