Serpentine supravenous hyperpigmentation induced by chemotherapy: a systematic review
Judy Shan, Bianca C. Obiakor, Justin Cheng, Rony A. Francois, Allison S. Dobry

TL;DR
This paper reviews cases of skin pigmentation near chemotherapy injection sites, highlighting the lack of understanding and treatment options for this condition.
Contribution
The study systematically compiles and analyzes SSH cases to improve awareness and guide future research and management strategies.
Findings
SSH commonly occurs near the forearm injection site and is often associated with erythema.
Most cases showed inflammatory histopathology, particularly vacuolar/lichenoid interface dermatitis.
Only 36% of patients achieved complete resolution, with no definitive treatment currently available.
Abstract
Serpentine supravenous hyperpigmentation (SSH) describes increased skin pigmentation that develops in the area immediately overlying the vessels through which chemotherapeutic drugs are administered. While SSH can be cosmetically distressing and there are no definitive management options, the literature is severely limited and the variations in clinical presentation, risk factors, and histopathology of SSH across patients are not well understood. We aimed to systematically summarize characteristics from current available data, and thus improve SSH awareness and management. A literature search was conducted in PubMed using specific eligibility criteria through the end of December 2022. Included articles focused on patients who experienced SSH after chemotherapy infusion. Study quality was assessed using a modified Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine quality rating scheme. Of the 41…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChemotherapy-related skin toxicity · Cancer Treatment and Pharmacology · Drug-Induced Adverse Reactions
