Severe Necrotizing Cutaneous Lesions Complicating Treatment with Interferon Beta-1b

Abstract
Recombinant interferon beta-1b (Betaseron) was licensed in 1993 to reduce exacerbations of multiple sclerosis. Approval of the drug was greeted enthusiastically, despite a modest 30 percent reduction in relapses and side effects that include local inflammatory reactions and a flulike syndrome.1 We report the occurrence of severe necrotizing cutaneous reactions in a 38-year-old woman with an eight-year history of multiple sclerosis. She self-injected the standard dose of recombinant interferon beta-1b (9 million units) subcutaneously on alternate days.