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C3.1. DynaMed Plus Erysipelas

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DynaMed Plus: Erysipelas
Erysipelas
Overview and Recommendations
Background
Erysipelas is an acute bacterial infection of the dermis and hypodermis which may also involve
cutaneous lymphatics.
Definitions of erysipelas vary among experts and geographic regions:
Classically, erysipelas is defined as an infection limited to the upper dermis with prominent
superficial lymphatic involvement (in contrast to cellulitis, which involves deeper dermis and
subcutaneous fat).
Alternatively, the term erysipelas can be used to refer to a skin infection occurring only on the
face.
In Europe, erysipelas is often used as a synonym for cellulitis.
In this topic, we will use the classic definition unless otherwise stated.
Group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus is the most common cause but group C or G streptococci and
Staphylococcus aureus are also reported causes.
Common predisposing conditions include epidermal injury, lymphedema, chronic venous
insufficiency, or systemic illnesses such as diabetes and hypertension.
Evaluation
A diagnosis is made clinically, based on physical examination findings.
A typical presentation is a brightly erythematous plaque raised above the level of surrounding skin
with a clear line of demarcation between the involved and uninvolved tissue.
Skin findings overlap with those of cellulitis and distinguishing the two is not always possible.
Features that favor the diagnosis of erysipelas over cellulitis include:
area of inflammation raised above surrounding skin
distinct demarcation between involved and normal skin
Laboratory testing is typically not needed.
Management
Penicillin has classically been the treatment of choice for erysipelas.
Due to a variation of use of the terms cellulitis and erysipelas in practice and in the medical literature,
the Infectious Disease Society of America combined treatment recommendations for cellulitis and
erysipelas in their 2014 guidelines.
For patients with mild infection (for example, without signs of systemic infection), select an
antimicrobial agent active against streptococci (Strong recommendation), such as:
penicillin V
250-500 mg orally every 6 hours for adults
125-250 mg orally every 6-8 hours for children ≥ 12 years old
25-50 mg/kg/day orally in 3-4 divided doses (maximum 3 g/day) for children < 12 years
old
a cephalosporin, such as cephalexin
cephalexin 500 mg orally every 6 hours for adults
25-50 mg/kg/day orally in equally divided doses in children ≥ 1-14 years old
250 mg every 6 hours or 500 mg every 12 hours for children ≥ 15 years old
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Treatment modifications should be made for patients with a more severe illness, patients with risk
factors for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), or unusual pathogens and host factors
such as immunocompromise.
The recommended duration of antimicrobial therapy is 5 days, but treatment should be extended if the
infection has not improved within this time period (Strong recommendation).
Elevate the affected area to help with drainage and to hasten improvement, and treat predisposing
factors and underlying causes, if identified (Strong recommendation).
Prevention
Erysipelas recurs in approximately 10%-40% of cases.
Measures to reduce recurrence of erysipelas include:
treating predisposing conditions such as tinea pedis or interdigital maceration
reducing peripheral edema with elevation, compressive stockings, pressure pumps, or diuretics if
appropriate
Consider prophylactic antibiotics in patients with 3-4 episodes of cellulitis per year despite attempts to
treat and control predisposing conditions (Weak recommendation), with potential regimens including
penicillin or erythromycin orally twice daily for 4-52 weeks or penicillin G benzathine intramuscularly
every 2-4 weeks.
Related Summaries
Cellulitis
Group A Streptococcus
Staphylococcus aureus
Skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI) (list of topics)
General Information
Description
erysipelas refers to a diffuse, superficial spreading infection of the skin(1)
Also called
superficial cutaneous cellulitis
St. Anthony's fire
Definitions
definitions of skin and soft tissue infections
Infection
Erysipelas
Cellulitis
Folliculitis
Furuncle
Carbuncle
Cutaneous abscess
Definition
Superficial infection of the skin involving
lymphatics
Acute infection of skin involving deep dermis and
subcutaneous fat
Superficial infection of hair follicles with
purulence in epidermis
Hair follicle infection with associated small
subcutaneous abscess
Cluster of furuncles
Localized collection of pus within dermis and
deeper skin tissue
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Pyomyositis
Purulent infection of skeletal muscle, often with
abscess
Superficial infection of skin characterized by
Impetigo
pustules or vesicles that progress to crusting or
bullae
Ecthyma
Deeper variant of impetigo evolving into ulcer
Clostridium myonecrosis (gas gangrene)
Necrotizing infection involving muscle
Aggressive infection of subcutaneous tissue
Necrotizing fasciitis
spreading along fascial planes
Reference - Ann Intern Med 2018 Feb 6;168(3):ITC17
definitions of erysipelas vary among experts and geographic regions(1, 2, 3)
classically, erysipelas is defined as infection limited to the upper dermis with prominent
superficial lymphatic involvement
alternatively, the term erysipelas can be used to refer to a skin infection occurring only on the
face
in Europe, erysipelas is often used as a synonym for cellulitis
DynaMed commentary – in this topic, we will use the classic definition unless otherwise stated
Epidemiology
Who is most affected
erysipelas may be more common in(3)
infants
young children
older adults
Incidence/Prevalence
skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs) are among the most common reasons for ambulatory care visits,
emergency department visits, and hospital admission worldwide(1, 3)
no validated data is available to determine the precise worldwide incidence of erysipelas or its
comparative prevalence to cellulitis
variations in use of the terms cellulitis and erysipelas also make quantification difficult
in the United States, overall incidence of skin and soft tissue infections approximately 4.8 cases
per 100 person-years (BMC Infect Dis 2015 Aug 21;15:362)
United Kingdom hospital incidence data reported 69,576 episodes of cellulitis and 516 episodes
of erysipelas in 2004-2005 (BMJ Clin Evid 2008 Jan 2;2008 full-text)
Risk factors
any disruption in skin barrier, such as(1, 2, 3)
trauma or surgery
skin conditions such as
fungal infection including tinea pedis (athlete's foot)
inflammatory dermatoses including eczema or psoriasis
impetigo or ecthyma
herpes simplex infection
toe web intertrigo (cutaneous inflammation on opposing skin surfaces)
fissured toe webs from maceration
previous cutaneous damage such as
abrasion
insect bite
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puncture wound
ulcer
postvaccination
exposure of neonatal umbilical stump (rare)
any disruption of venous or lymphatic flow, such as(1)
venous insufficiency
lymphedema
lymphatic damage due to prior episodes of erysipelas and/or cellulitis
obesity
Etiology and Pathogenesis
Pathogen
group A beta-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) believed to be the most common pathogens(1, 3)
groups C or G streptococci or Staphylococcus aureus are less commonly reported causes(1, 3)
GABHS most commonly identified organisms by direct immunofluorescence of skin biopsy
specimens
based on 2 cohort studies
prospective cohort of 27 patients with clinically diagnosed erysipelas
erysipelas distinguished from cellulitis based on presence of well-defined, sharp, elevated
margin of skin lesions
streptococcal species detected in skin biopsies of 18 patients with erysipelas
group A streptococci detected in 13 patients
group G streptococci detected in 4 patients
group C streptococci detected in 1 patient
an additional 8 patients had serologic evidence of streptococcal infection
no causative organism was identified in 1 patient
Reference - Arch Dermatol 1989 Jun;125(6):779
cohort of 12 patients with erysipelas
group A streptococci detected by immunofluorescence in skin specimens of 11 of 12
patients with erysipelas
group A streptococci isolated from blood in 1 of those 11 patients
7 of 11 patients had serologic evidence of group A streptococcal infection
etiology in 1 patient unclear, but S. aureus isolated from superficial wound culture
Reference - J Invest Dermatol 2010 May;130(5):1365 full-text
streptococci most commonly isolated organisms from blood in bacteremic patients with
erysipelas and cellulitis
based on systematic review
607 patients with erysipelas or cellulitis identified in systematic review
4.6% had positive blood cultures
75% of positive cultures due to streptococcal species
S. pyogenes in 46%
other groups of beta-hemolytic streptococci in 29%
S. aureus in 14%
gram-negative organisms (Citrobacter diversus, Escherichia coli, Proteus morganii) in 11%
Reference - J Infect 2012 Feb;64(2):148
Pathogenesis
any breach in the skin barrier can serve as portal of entry for bacteria and establishment of infection(1,
3)
in classic erysipelas(3)
group A beta-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) is the most common infecting agent
infection is typically limited to the upper dermis
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lymphatic involvement is prominent
lower extremities are most often involved(3)
any breach in skin of the lower extremities can serve as a portal of entry
dermatophyte infections, such as athlete's foot, may additionally serve as a reservoir for
GABHS, augmenting risk of infection
when erysipelas involves the face(3)
preceding streptococcal sore throat is common
precise mode of spread from throat to skin is unclear
History and Physical
Clinical presentation
legs most common site of erysipelas involvement
based on retrospective cohort study
981 patients (median age 61 years) with 1,142 episodes of erysipelas were evaluated
567 episodes treated in outpatient setting
575 episodes treated in hospital setting
recurrent erysipelas in 35%
sites of involvement
leg in 68%
arm or hand in 12%
face in 9%
Reference - BMC Infect Dis 2015 Sep 30;15:402 full-text
lower extremities most commonly involved in patients hospitalized with erysipelas, and fever
present in majority of patients
based on retrospective cohort study
223 patients (median age 61 years) hospitalized with erysipelas in Poland were evaluated
recurrent erysipelas in 22%
site of involvement
lower extremity in 80.3%
face in 13%
upper extremity in 6.7%
systemic manifestations included
fever in 80.7%
chills in 46.6%
risk factors or portal of entry identified in 72%
mechanical trauma in 19.7%
tinea pedis and nails in 16.5%
venous insufficiency in 15.2%
leg ulcers in 12.5%
surgery in 8%
comparing men vs. women
risk factor or portal of entry
mechanical trauma in 28.2% vs. 12.5% (p = 0.03)
venous insufficiency in 5.8% 23.3% (p = 0.001)
leg ulcers in 5.8% vs. 18.3% (p = 0.004)
blood testing parameters
mean white blood cells 10.5 cells/mm3 vs. 9 cells/mm3 (p = 0.007)
mean C-reactive protein 129.5 mg/L vs. 91.2 mg/L (p = 0.04)
Reference - Przegl Epidemiol 2016;70(4):575
lower extremities appear to be most common site of involvement in patients hospitalized with
erysipelas, with cutaneous fungal infections most frequently identified portals of entry
based on retrospective cohort study
99 adults (median age 54 years) with erysipelas admitted to a single hospital in Greece were
evaluated
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diagnosis of erysipelas was made clinically based on classic presentation
reported sites of involvement
lower extremity in 66%
face in 17%
upper extremities in 6%
associated symptoms
fever present in 25%
regional lymphadenopathy in 22%
risk factors or portal of entry identified in 89%
cutaneous fungal infection/tinea pedis in 32%
venous insufficiency in 23%
dermatologic diseases in 22%
skin trauma in 20%
insect bite in 13%
surgery in 4%
lymphedema in 3%
Reference - Int J Dermatol 2010 Sep;49(9):1012
History
Chief concern (CC)
bright, red, tender, warm, painful skin lesion with well-demarcated and raised borders(1, 2, 3)
History of present illness (HPI)
skin lesions seen with erysipelas expand rapidly, usually over a period of several days(1, 3)
affected area is typically bright, red, and raised
margins of the affected area are sharp, with clear delineation from surrounding normal skin
central resolution of erythema may occur as the outer margins of the lesion continue to expand
edema often accompanies erysipelas, and can be significant(1, 3)
blebs and bullae may form
eyes may be swollen shut in facial erysipelas
regional lymph nodes may also swell and become tender(1)
systemic symptoms, such as fever and chills, occur in a minority and are typically mild(1, 3)
Past medical history (PMH)
ask about skin conditions or infections which may serve as portals of entry such as(1, 2, 3)
tinea pedis (athlete's foot)
impetigo
eczema
ulcerations
toe web intertrigo
fissured toe webs from maceration
herpes simplex
ask about recent injuries such as(1, 3)
skin trauma (often undetectable on examination)
local surgery
for patients with facial erysipelas, ask about recent strep throat(3)
an association between strep throat and facial erysipelas is reported
mechanism of spread to skin is unclear
Physical
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General physical
systemic symptoms are typically mild, when present, but can vary and may include(1)
fever
tachycardia
confusion
Skin
look for a bright, erythematous lesions with well-defined borders(1, 2, 3)
affected skin may be warm and tender to touch
lesion is typically raised
borders of the lesions clearly delimit involved and uninvolved tissue
central clearing may be present
note that associated edema can be significant(1, 3)
skin may resemble an orange peel (peau d'orange), with dimpling due to swelling around hair
follicles
vesicles, blebs, or bullae may form
palpate regional lymph nodes, which may be tender, warm, or swollen(1)
photograph of erysipelas can be found in Acta Dermatovenerol Alp Panonica Adriat 2007
Sep;16(3):123
HEENT
when erysipelas affects the face(2)
both sides of the face may be involved, in a butterfly distribution
associated swelling may be significant, and eyes may be shut
unilateral distribution of rash that does not cross midline may suggest herpes zoster
Extremities
look for any potential portal of entry, such as(1, 2, 3)
tinea pedis or other fungal infection affecting the skin
abrasions
dermatologic diseases, such as psoriasis
toe web fissures or maceration
intertrigo
examine any known breach in the skin, such as a surgical incision or site of trauma carefully(1, 3)
Diagnosis
Making the diagnosis
erysipelas is a clinical diagnosis based on the presence of spreading inflammation of the skin,
characterized by(1, 2, 3)
a brightly erythematous lesion with well demarcated borders
an area of inflammation raised above surrounding skin
regional lymphadenopathy
clinical features of erysipelas and cellulitis overlap, and distinguishing between them is not always
possible or necessary as treatment strategies are similar(1, 2, 3)
Differential diagnosis
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cellulitis
erysipelas classically involves more superficial layers of the skin and cutaneous lymphatics,
whereas cellulitis extends more deeply into subcutaneous tissues
features that favor diagnosis of erysipelas include
area of inflammation raised above surrounding skin
distinct demarcation between involved and normal skin
in cellulitis, no clear distinction between infected and uninfected skin is present
both erysipelas and cellulitis may present with signs of local inflammation (warmth, erythema,
and pain) as well as lymphangitis and lymphadenitis
References - (1, 3), N Engl J Med 1996 Jan 25;334(4):240
additional considerations on the differential diagnosis include(3)
contact dermatitis
urticaria
early herpes zoster
erysipeloid
infection caused by gram-positive Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae typically found in meat
and fish handlers
characterized by red maculopapular lesion on hands and fingers
gout
superficial thrombophlebitis
deep vein thrombosis (DVT)
inflammatory breast cancer
systemic disorders such as
systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
Sweet syndrome
familial Mediterranean fever (FMF)
in increasingly ill patients, or if presence of widespread petechiae and ecchymoses indicating systemic
toxicity, consider(1, 2)
necrotizing fasciitis - within hours or days becomes dusky with bullae formation
myositis or myonecrosis
toxic shock syndrome
Testing overview
erysipelas is typically a clinical diagnosis and testing is not usually needed(1, 2, 3)
in patients with signs of systemic toxicity, consider(1, 2)
blood tests, including
complete blood count with differential
creatinine
bicarbonate
creatine phosphokinase
C-reactive protein (CRP)
blood cultures
positive in ≤ 5% of cases overall
may be helpful in immunocompromised patients or when atypical pathogen is suspected
cultures of aspirate, swab, or skin biopsy generally reserved for atypical cases or cases not responding
to empiric therapy(1, 2)
imaging not needed for diagnosis but may be helpful in identifying complications or other diagnoses(1)
ultrasound may be useful in identifying subcutaneous accumulation or pus or abscess
x-ray or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may aid in the detection of underlying osteomyelitis
MRI may help differentiate cellulitis from necrotizing fasciitis, but definitive diagnosis requires
urgent surgical exploration
see the Diagnosis subsection in Cellulitis for additional information
Treatment
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Treatment overview
penicillin has classically been the treatment of choice for erysipelas(1, 3)
due to variation of use of the terms cellulitis and erysipelas in practice and in the medical literature, the
Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) combined treatment recommendations for cellulitis and
erysipelas in 2014 guidelines(1)
for patients with mild infection (for example, without signs of systemic infection), select
antimicrobial agent active against streptococci, such as (IDSA Strong recommendation,
Moderate-quality evidence)
penicillin V
250-500 mg orally every 6 hours for adults
125-250 mg orally every 6-8 hours for children ≥ 12 years old
25-50 mg/kg/day orally in 3-4 divided doses (maximum 3 g/day) for children < 12
years old
a cephalosporin, such as cephalexin
500 mg orally every 6 hours for adults
25-50 mg/kg/day orally in equally divided doses in children ≥ 1 to 14 years old
250 mg every 6 hours or 500 mg every 12 hours for children ≥ 15 years old
dicloxacillin
adult dosage 500 mg orally 4 times daily
pediatric dosage 25-50 mg/kg/day orally in 4 divided doses
clindamycin
adult dosage 300-450 mg orally 4 times daily
pediatric dosage 25-30 mg/kg/day orally in 3 divided doses
for patients with moderate infection (for example, with signs of systemic infection), select an IV
antimicrobial agent active against streptococci, such as
penicillin G
adults dosage 2-4 million units IV every 4-6 hours
pediatric dosage 60-100,000 units/kg/dose IV every 6 hours
ceftriaxone
adult dosage 1-2 g IV once daily
pediatric dosage 50-75 mg/kg IV intramuscularly once daily or in divided doses
every 12 hours (maximum 2 g/day)
cefazolin
adult dosage 1 g IV every 8 hours
pediatric dosage 50 mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses
clindamycin
adult dosage 600 mg IV every 8 hours
pediatric dosage 25-40 mg/kg/day IV in 3 divided doses
need for treatment of methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) in addition to
streptococci controversial
many experts include coverage against MSSA (IDSA Weak recommendation, Lowquality evidence)
recommended options for treatment of both streptococci and MSSA include
cefazolin and clindamycin
for patients with severe infection (for example, with signs of systemic infection suggesting
sepsis), treat broadly until a pathogen is identified, with a regimen that targets both streptococci
and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, such as vancomycin plus piperacillintazobactam (IDSA Strong recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
vancomycin
adult dosage 30 mg/kg/day IV in 2 divided doses
pediatric dosage 40 mg/kg/day IV in 4 divided doses
piperacillin-tazobactam
adult dosage 3.375 g IV every 6 hours or 4.5 g IV every 8 hours
pediatric dosage 60–75 mg/kg/dose of the piperacillin component IV every 6 hours
modifications may be made based on severity of illness, risk factors for methicillin-resistant S.
aureus (MRSA), or unusual pathogens and host factors such as immunocompromise
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see the Treatment section of Cellulitis for additional information
recommended duration of antimicrobial therapy is 5 days, but treatment should be extended if the
infection has not improved within this time period (IDSA Strong recommendation, High-quality
evidence)(1)
elevation of the affected area may help drainage and hasten improvement(3)
underlying causes, such as tinea pedis, should be treated if identified(3)
Treatment setting
2014 Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) guidelines on management of skin and soft tissue
infections recommendations for hospitalization(1)
outpatient therapy recommended for patients who do not have systemic inflammatory response
syndrome (SIRS), altered mental status, or hemodynamic instability (IDSA Strong
recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
hospitalization recommended if concern for a deeper or necrotizing infection, for patients with
poor adherence to therapy, for infection in a severely immunocompromised patient, or if
outpatient treatment is failing (IDSA Strong recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
Medications
2014 Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) guideline on diagnosis and management of skin
and soft tissue infection
mild cellulitis without signs of systemic infection
antimicrobial agent active against streptococci recommended for non-purulent cellulitis (IDSA
Strong recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
antibiotic options
penicillin V 250-500 mg orally every 6 hours for adults
a cephalosporin, such as cephalexin 500 mg orally every 6 hours for adults
dicloxacillin
adult dosage 500 mg orally 4 times daily
pediatric dosage 25-50 mg/kg/day orally in 4 divided doses
clindamycin
adult dosage 300-450 mg orally 4 times daily
pediatric dosage 25-30 mg/kg/day orally in 3 divided doses
consider regimen active against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) or both
streptococci and MRSA for patients who do not respond to initial therapy or patients with
purulent abscess, MRSA risk factors, including penetrating trauma (especially due to injection
drug use) or MRSA colonization or infection
antibiotic options
clindamycin (dosed as above)
DynaMed commentary – MRSA has variable resistance to clindamycin,
consider local susceptibilities
co-trimoxazole (TMP-SMX) with or without amoxicillin or other beta-lactam
antibiotic if streptococci still suspected
co-trimoxazole dosing
adult dosage 1-2 double-strength tablets orally twice daily
pediatric dosage 8-12 mg/kg/day (based on trimethoprim component)
orally in 2 divided doses
amoxicillin dosing
adult dosage typically 500 mg every 12 hours or 250 mg every 8 hours
pediatric dosage typically 25 mg/kg/day in divided doses every 12
hours or 20 mg/kg/day in divided doses every 8 hours
doxycycline with or without amoxicillin or other beta-lactam antibiotic if
streptococci still suspected
doxycycline dosage 100 mg orally twice daily in patients ≥ 8 years old
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amoxicillin dosed as above
linezolid
adult dosage 600 mg orally twice daily
pediatric dosage
10 mg/kg orally every 12 hours for children aged 5-11 years
10 mg/kg orally every 8 hours for children < 5 years old
cellulitis with signs of systemic infection (moderate nonpurulent infection)
IV antibiotics active against streptococci are indicated
penicillin G
adult dosage 2-4 million units IV every 4-6 hours
pediatric dosage 60-100,000 units/kg/dose every 6 hours
ceftriaxone
typical adult dosage 1-2 g IV once daily
cefazolin
adult dosage 1 g IV every 8 hours
pediatric dosage 50 mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses
clindamycin
adult dosage 600 mg IV every 8 hours
pediatric dosage 25-40 mg/kg/day IV in 3 divided doses
need to treat for methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA) in addition to streptococci controversial
many experts include coverage against MSSA (IDSA Weak recommendation, Low-quality
evidence)
options for treatment of both streptococci and MSSA include cefazolin and clindamycin
for patients with risk factors for MRSA infection or purulent cellulitis
vancomycin, daptomycin or other antimicrobial effective against both streptococci and
MRSA recommended (IDSA Strong recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
antibiotic options
vancomycin
adult dosage 30 mg/kg/day IV in 2 divided doses
pediatric dosage 40 mg/kg/day IV in 4 divided doses
other options with activity against both streptococci and MRSA
linezolid
adult dosage 600 mg orally twice daily
pediatric dosage
10 mg/kg orally every 12 hours for children aged 5-11 years
10 mg/kg orally every 8 hours for children < 5 years old
telavancin - typical dose 10 mg/kg IV every 24 hours
daptomycin - adult dosage 4 mg/kg IV every 24 hours
newer agents ceftaroline, dalbavancin, oritavancin, delafloxacin, and tedizolid are
also now available
for patients with severe infection (for example, concern for sepsis) concern for deeper
infection such as bullae or skin sloughing, hypotension, or evidence of organ dysfunction,
or with severe immunocompromise (malignancy on chemotherapy, neutropenia, severe cellmediated immunodeficiency)
consider broad-spectrum antibiotic regimen such as (IDSA Strong recommendation,
Moderate-quality evidence)
vancomycin
adult dosage 30 mg/kg/day IV in 2 divided doses
pediatric dosage 40 mg/kg/day IV in 4 divided doses
plus any of
piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5 g IV every 8 hours (antipseudomonal dosing)
imipenem-cilastatin standard dose 500-750 mg IV every 6 hours
meropenem standard dose 0.5-1 g every 8 hours
DynaMed commentary -- combination of vancomycin and piperacillintazobactam has been associated with increased renal toxicity.
duration of therapy
recommended duration of antimicrobial therapy is 5 days, but treatment should be extended if
the infection has not improved within this time period (IDSA Strong recommendation, High11/20
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quality evidence)
for patient with febrile neutropenia, 7-14 days recommended for most bacterial skin and soft
tissue infections (IDSA Strong recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
Reference - Clin Infect Dis 2014 Jul 15;59(2):e10 full-text, correction can be found in Clin Infect Dis
2015 May 1;60(9):1448, executive summary can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2014 Jul
15;59(2):147 full-text
Antibiotics
limited evidence comparing penicillins to other antibiotics for reducing or eliminating symptoms
of cellulitis and erysipelas
based on Cochrane review with limited evidence
systematic review of 25 randomized trials evaluating interventions for nonsurgically acquired
cellulitis and erysipelas in 2,488 patients
17 trials evaluated treatment for skin and skin structure infections, 5 trials evaluated cellulitis,
and 3 studies specifically evaluated erysipelas
for symptom reduction or elimination
oral pristinamycin (a macrolide) appeared better than IV penicillin (level 2 [mid-level]
evidence) (65% vs. 53%, p < 0.05, NNT 9) in 1 trial with 288 hospitalized patients with
erysipelas and fever
ceftriaxone (a third-generation cephalosporin) appeared better than flucloxacillin (level 2
[mid-level] evidence) (87.5% vs. 60.9%, NNT 4, p = 0.049) in 1 trial with 47 patients with
cellulitis, fever, and lymphadenitis
macrolides appeared better than penicillins in 2 trials, but neither trial was statistically
significant
no significant differences comparing
first-generation cephalosporin vs. penicillin in analysis of 2 trials with 41 patients
different generations of cephalosporins in analysis of 6 trials with 538 patients
insufficient evidence to evaluate varying duration of treatment, different routes, addition
of corticosteroids, or vibration therapy
Reference - Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2010 Jun 16;(6):CD004299
DynaMed commentary – skin and skin structure infections included wide range of infections
including abscess, impetigo, folliculitis (inflammation of hair follicles), furunculosis (boils), and
wound infection; minority of trials were focused solely on cellulitis or erysipelas
Corticosteroids
2014 Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) guidelines on diagnosis and management of skin
and soft tissue infection(1)
consider systemic corticosteroids in patients with cellulitis or erysipelas in absence of diabetes
(IDSA Weak recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
addition of prednisolone to antibiotic regimen associated with faster time to resolution for
patients with erysipelas (level 2 [mid-level] evidence)
based on randomized trial with unclear reporting of allocation concealment
112 patients hospitalized with erysipelas were randomized to prednisolone 5-30 mg/day tapering
dose plus antibiotic vs. placebo plus antibiotic for 8 days
comparing prednisolone vs. placebo at 3 weeks
median healing time 5 days vs. 6 days (p < 0.01)
90% healed by 10 days vs. 14.6 days
hospital length of stay 5 days vs. 6 days (p < 0.01)
median duration of IV antibiotics 3 days vs. 4 days (p < 0.05)
relapse in 13 patients (12%) overall, 54% of whom were in placebo group
no significant difference in side effects
Reference - Scand J Infect Dis 1997;29(4):377
nonsignificant trend toward fewer relapses in follow-up study at 12 months
based on follow-up of 103 patients from above trial followed for 12 months after cure
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relapse occurred in 11.5% of prednisone group vs. 25.5% of placebo group (relative risk
2.2, 95% CI 0.9-5.4)
Reference - Scand J Infect Dis 1998;30(2):206
DynaMed commentary -- the term erysipelas may encompass cellulitis in these studies
Other management
elevation of the affected area and treatment of predisposing factors, such as edema or underlying
cutaneous disorders, are recommended (IDSA Strong recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
Complications and Prognosis
Complications
most complications are local and include
bullae
abscess
hemorrhagic lesions
necrotic lesions
lymphedema
Reference - Int J Dermatol. 2010 Sep;49(9):1012-7, Am J Clin Dermatol. 2003;4(3):157-63
less frequent but more severe complications include
sepsis
meningitis
endocarditis
necrotizing fasciitis
streptococcal toxic shock syndrome
Reference - (2), Acta Dermatovenerol Alp Panonica Adriat 2007 Sep;16(3):123
abscess and thrombosis more common in men hospitalized for erysipelas compared to women
based on retrospective cohort study
223 patients (median age 61 years) hospitalized for erysipelas were evaluated
recurrent erysipelas in 22%
complications observed in 22%, including
abscess in 8%
ulcers in 6.3%
phelgmon in 4.5%
thrombosis in 3.1%
comparing men vs. women
abscess in 14.6% vs. 2.5% (p = 0.001)
thrombosis in 5.8% vs. 0.83% (p = 0.039)
Reference - Przegl Epidemiol 2016;70(4):575
Prognosis
prognosis is excellent with early diagnosis and treatment(3)
recurrence
recurrence of erysipelas is common, with 1 report estimating 40% (J Dtsch Dermatol Ges 2004
Feb;2(2):89)
recurrent erysipelas may occur more often in patients who are overweight and patients
with venous insufficiency, lymphedema, and tinea pedis
based on retrospective cohort study
574 patients (mean age 58 years) hospitalized for initial or recurrent erysipelas were
assessed
recurrent erysipelas in 46.2%
recurrent erysipelas occurred more often in lower leg than single-episode cases
comparing patients with single episode vs. recurrent episodes
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overweight in 9.5% vs. 20.2% (p < 0.001)
venous insufficiency in 7.9% vs. 16.7% (p < 0.003)
lymphedema in 3.6% vs. 8.2% (p < 0.04)
tinea pedis in 37.2% vs. 50.2% (p = 0.003)
trauma in 12.5% vs. 6% (p < 0.02)
Reference - J Dtsch Dermatol Ges 2004 Feb;2(2):89
lymphedema, venous insufficiency, and skin disease associated with recurrence of
erysipelas
based on retrospective cohort study
502 adults (median age 60 years) with 573 episodes of erysipelas were evaluated
142 patients (29%) had recurrent erysipelas
factors associated with recurrent erysipelas in multivariable analysis
lymphedema (odds ratio [OR] 4.3, 95% CI 1.3-14)
venous insufficiency (OR 2.3, 95% CI 1-5.2)
skin disease (OR 1.9, 95% CI 1-3.7)
Reference - BMC Infect Dis 2014 May 18;14:270 full-text
recurrent and treatment-resistant erysipelas of cheek reported in patient with homozygous
mannose binding lectin (MBL) deficiency (Lancet 2012 Apr 21;379(9825):1560)
Prevention and Screening
Prevention
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) recommendations for prevention of recurrence
as part of routine patient care, and during acute stage of cellulitis and erysipelas, identify and
treat predisposing conditions (IDSA Strong recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence), such
as
edema
obesity
eczema
venous insufficiency
toe web abnormalities
carefully examine interdigital toe spaces
treatment of fissures, scaling, or maceration may reduce recurrence (IDSA Strong
recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
prophylactic antibiotics
consider prophylactic antibiotics in patients with 3-4 episodes of cellulitis per year despite
attempts to treat and control predisposing conditions (IDSA Weak recommendation,
Moderate-quality evidence)
continue prophylactic program as long as predisposing factors persist (IDSA Strong
recommendation, Moderate-quality evidence)
regimens include
penicillin or erythromycin orally twice daily for 4-52 weeks
penicillin G benzathine intramuscularly every 2-4 weeks
Reference - Clin Infect Dis 2014 Jul 15;59(2):e10 full-text, correction can be found in Clin
Infect Dis 2015 May 1;60(9):1448, executive summary can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2014 Jul
15;59(2):147 full-text
prophylactic antibiotics reduce risk of recurrent cellulitis during treatment but may not reduce
risk after completion of treatment (level 2 [mid-level] evidence)
based on Cochrane review with wide confidence interval for recurrent cellulitis after completion
of treatment
systematic review of 6 randomized trials evaluating interventions for preventing recurrent
cellulitis in 573 adults
inclusion criteria for minimum number of previous episodes of cellulitis varied across trials; all
previous episodes occurred ≤ 3 years before trial entry
5 trials evaluated antibiotics in patients with previous episode of leg cellulitis
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4 trials evaluated penicillin (largest trials below) and 1 trial evaluated erythromycin
treatment duration ranged from 6 to 18 months
comparing antibiotics to placebo/no treatment at end of treatment phase
antibiotics associated with decrease in recurrence of cellulitis in analysis of 5 trials with
513 adults
risk ratio 0.31 (95% CI 0.13-0.72)
NNT 4-12 with recurrence of cellulitis in 32% of control group
no significant differences in
hospitalization in analysis of 3 trials with 429 adults
any adverse reactions in analysis of 4 trials with 469 adults
comparing antibiotics to placebo after completion of treatment, no significant difference in
recurrence of cellulitis (risk ratio 0.88, 95% CI 0.59-1.31) in analysis of 2 trials with 287 adults,
but CI includes possibility of benefit or harm
Reference - Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2017 Jun 20;(6):CD009758
prophylactic penicillin
prophylactic penicillin reduces risk for recurrent leg cellulitis during treatment (level 1
[likely reliable] evidence) but may not reduce risk after completion of treatment (level 2
[mid-level] evidence)
based on randomized trial with wide confidence interval for recurrence during follow-up
274 patients (mean age 58 years) with ≥ 2 episodes of leg cellulitis in past 3 years
randomized to penicillin V 250 mg orally twice daily vs. placebo for 1 year and followed
up to 3 years
all patients began trial medication following treatment of index cellulitis episode and had
recurrent episode within past 24 weeks at baseline
median follow-up 25 months
90% completed 18 months of follow-up and all patients were included in intention-to-treat
analyses
comparing penicillin vs. placebo
recurrence during treatment in 22% vs. 37% (hazard ratio 0.55, 95% CI 0.35-0.86, p
= 0.01, NNT 4-9)
recurrence during follow-up in 27% vs. 27% (hazard ratio 1.08, 95% CI 0.61-1.93),
not significant but CI includes possibility of benefit or harm
median time to first recurrence of cellulitis 626 days vs. 532 days (no p value
reported)
total recurrences during treatment 76 vs. 122 (p = 0.03)
total recurrences during follow-up 43 vs. 42 (not significant)
adverse events in 27% vs. 35% (not significant)
mean length of hospital stay 10 days vs. 9.2 days (no p value reported)
no significant differences in new edema or ulceration during treatment or follow-up
Reference - PATCH I trial (N Engl J Med 2013 May 2;368(18):1695), commentary can be
found in Br J Dermatol 2014 Dec;171(6):1300, N Engl J Med 2013 Aug 29;369(9):880, N
Engl J Med 2013 Aug 29;369(9):881
prophylactic penicillin associated with nonsignificant decrease in recurrence of cellulitis or
erysipelas (level 2 [mid-level] evidence)
based on randomized trial with inadequate statistical power
123 patients recently treated for cellulitis or erysipelas of the leg (79% with initial
infection) randomized to penicillin V 250 mg orally twice daily vs. placebo for 6 months
and followed for 2.5 years
only 31% of target sample size recruited due to slow recruitment and changes in
hospitalization policy
full adherence in 79% (defined as ≥ 75% of prescribed dose)
cellulitis or erysipelas recurred in 20% of penicillin group vs. 33% of placebo group (p =
0.07)
Reference - PATCH II trial (Br J Dermatol 2012 Jan;166(1):169 full-text)
penicillin prophylaxis may reduce recurrence of cellulitis in patients without predisposing
factors for cellulitis (level 2 [mid-level] evidence)
based on prospective cohort study
115 patients with definite or presumptive streptococcus cellulitis evaluated
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31 patients had prophylaxis with benzathine penicillin G 1.2 million units per month
for 1 year
84 patients had no or incomplete prophylaxis (control group)
49.6% of patients had predisposing factors for infection
percentage higher in prophylactic group (64.5%) vs. control group (44%)
factors included diabetes mellitus, impaired venous drainage, deep-venous
thrombosis, stasis dermatitis, and coronary artery bypass graft
comparing prophylaxis vs. control group
recurrence 12.9% vs. 19% (not significant)
recurrence in patients with predisposing factors 21.6% vs. 17% (no p value
reported)
recurrence in patients without predisposing factors 0% vs. 20% (no p value
reported)
Reference - Clin Infect Dis 1997 Sep;25(3):685
Guidelines and Resources
Guidelines
International guidelines
Italian Society of Infectious and Tropical Diseases (Societa Italiana di Malattie Infettive e
Tropicali)/International Society of Chemotherapy (SIMIT/ISC) consensus statement on diagnosis and
management of skin and soft-tissue infections can be found in J Chemother 2011 Oct;23(5):251,
SIMIT update can be found in J Chemother 2017 Aug;29(4):197 PDF
United States guidelines
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) clinical practice guideline on treatment of methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus infections in adults and children can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2011
Feb 1;52(3):e18, correction can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2011 Aug 1;53(3):319, commentary can be
found in Clin Infect Dis 2015 Apr 15;60(8):1290
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) practice guideline on diagnosis and management of
skin and soft tissue infections: 2014 update can be found at IDSA 2014 Jun or in Clin Infect Dis 2014
Jul 15;59(2):e10 full-text, correction can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2015 May 1;60(9):1448,
executive summary can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2014 Jul 15;59(2):147 full-text
Surgical Infection Society (SIS) expert consensus guideline on treatment of complicated skin and soft
tissue infections can be found in Surg Infect (Larchmt) 2009 Oct;10(5):467
European guidelines
Finnish updated current care guideline on bacterial skin infections can be found in Duodecim
2010;126(24):2883 [Finnish]
Asian guidelines
Korean Society of Infectious Diseases/Korean Society for Chemotherapy/Korean Orthopaedic
Association/Korean Dermatological Association (KSID/KSC/KOA/KDA) clinical practice guideline
on antibiotic treatment for community-acquired and soft tissue infections can be found in Infect
Chemother 2017 Dec;49(4):301 full-text
Review articles
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review of skin and soft tissue infections can be found in Am Fam Physician 2015 Sep
15;92(6):474 full-text
review of bacterial skin infections can be found in Prim Care 2015 Dec;42(4):485
review of impetigo, erysipelas, and cellulitis can be found in Ferretti JJ, Stevens DL, Fischetti VA, ed.
Streptococcus pyogenes: Basic Biology to Clinical Manifestations. Oklahoma City, OK: University of
Oklahoma Health Sciences Center; 2016
review of diagnosis and management of cellulitis and erysipelas can be found in Br J Hosp Med
(Lond) 2015 Aug;76(8):C114
review of skin and soft-tissue infections and role of telavancin in their treatment can be found in Clin
Infect Dis 2015 Sep 15;61 Suppl 2:S69 full-text
review of cellulitis and erysipelas prevention can be found in BMJ Clin Evid 2015 Nov 18;2015: fulltext
review of group A streptococcal skin infection and rheumatic heart disease with focus on resource
limited settings can be found in Curr Opin Infect Dis 2012 Apr;25(2):145
reviews of group A streptococcal biology can be found in
Curr Opin Infect Dis 2011 Jun;24(3):196
Nat Rev Microbiol 2011 Sep 16;9(10):724
review of the skin microbiome can be found in Trends Microbiol 2013 Dec;21(12):660 full-text
review of cellulitis can be found in N Engl J Med 2004 Feb 26;350(9):904
discussion of antibiotic stewardship in skin and soft-tissue infections can be found in Clin Infect Dis
2010 Oct 15;51(8):895 full-text
review of deep vein thrombosis in patients with erysipelas and cellulitis can be found in Int J Dermatol
2013 Mar;52(3):279
MEDLINE search
to search MEDLINE for (Erysipelas) with targeted search (Clinical Queries), click therapy, diagnosis,
or prognosis
Patient Information
handout on cellulitis and erysipelas from British Association of Dermatologists
handout on erysipelas and cellulitis from Patient UK
handout on cellulitis from KidsHealth
ICD Codes
ICD-10 codes
A46 erysipelas
References
General references used
1. Stevens DL, Bisno AL, Chambers HF, et al. Practice guidelines for the diagnosis and management
of skin and soft tissue infections: 2014 update by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin
Infect Dis. 2014 Jul 15;59(2):e10-52 full-text, executive summary can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2014
Jul 15;59(2):147 full-text
2. Stevens DL, Bisno AL, Chambers HF, et al; Infectious Diseases Society of America. Practice
guidelines for the diagnosis and management of skin and soft-tissue infections. Clin Infect Dis. 2005
Nov 15;41(10):1373-406 full-text, correction can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2005 Dec
15;41(12):1830, Clin Infect Dis 2006 Apr 15;42(8):1219
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3. Stevens DL, Bryant AE. Impetigo, Erysipelas and Cellulitis. In: Ferretti JJ, Stevens DL, Fischetti
VA, ed. Streptococcus pyogenes: Basic Biology to Clinical Manifestations. Oklahoma City, OK:
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center; 2016
Recommendation grading systems used
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) 2014 uses Grading of Recommendations, Assessment,
Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) system
strength of recommendation
Strong recommendation - desirable effects clearly outweigh undesirable effects, or vice
versa
Weak recommendation - desirable effects closely balanced with undesirable effects, or
(with low- or very low-quality evidence) uncertainty in estimates of desirable effects,
harms, and burden so they may be closely balanced
quality of evidence
High-quality evidence - consistent evidence from well-performed randomized controlled
trials (RCTs) or exceptionally strong evidence from unbiased observational studies
Moderate-quality evidence - evidence from RCTs with important limitations (inconsistent
results, methodologic flaws, indirect, or imprecise) or exceptionally strong evidence from
unbiased observational studies
Low-quality evidence - evidence for ≥ 1 critical outcome from observational studies,
RCTs with serious flaws, or indirect evidence
Very low-quality evidence - evidence for ≥ 1 critical outcome from unsystematic clinical
observations or very indirect evidence
Reference - IDSA practice guideline on diagnosis and management of skin and soft tissue
infections: 2014 update can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2014 Jul 15;59(2):e10 full-text
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) grading system for recommendations
strength of recommendation grades
Grade A - good evidence to support recommendation for or against use
Grade B - moderate evidence to support recommendation for or against use
Grade C - poor evidence to support recommendation
quality of evidence ratings
I - evidence from ≥ 1 properly randomized, controlled trial
II - evidence from ≥ 1 well-designed nonrandomized clinical trial; from cohort or casecontrolled analytic studies (preferably from > 1 center); from multiple time series; or from
dramatic results from uncontrolled studies
III - evidence from opinions of respected authorities, based on clinical experience,
descriptive studies, or reports of expert committees
Reference - IDSA clinical practice guideline on treatment of methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus infections in adults and children (Clin Infect Dis 2011 Feb;52(3):e18),
correction can be found in Clin Infect Dis 2011 Aug 1;53(3):319, commentary can be found in
Clin Infect Dis 2015 Apr 15;60(8):1290
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We use the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) to
classify synthesized recommendations as Strong or Weak.
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Strong recommendations are used when, based on the available evidence, clinicians (without
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Special acknowledgements
Renee Ridzon, MD (Adjunct Associate Professor, Boston University School of Public Health;
Massachusetts, United States)
Dr. Ridzon declares no relevant financial conflicts of interest.
Esther Jolanda van Zuuren, MD (Head of Allergy, Dermatology, and Venereology, Leiden University
Medical Centre; Netherlands; Editor, Cochrane Skin Group)
Dr. van Zuuren declares no relevant financial conflicts of interest.
Vito Iacoviello, MD, FIDSA (Deputy Editor of Infectious Diseases, Immunology, and Rheumatology;
Assistant Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Chief of the Division of Infectious
Diseases, Mount Auburn Hospital; Massachusetts, United States)
Dr. Iacoviello declares no relevant financial conflicts of interest.
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How to cite
National Library of Medicine, or "Vancouver style" (International Committee of Medical Journal Editors):
DynaMed Plus [Internet]. Ipswich (MA): EBSCO Information Services. 1995 - . Record No. T115431,
Erysipelas; [updated 2018 Dec 04, cited place cited date here]. Available from
https://www.dynamed.com/topics/dmp~AN~T115431. Registration and login required.
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