Clinicopathologic Overlap of Vulvar Psoriasis and Candidiasis.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-24 DOI:10.1097/LGT.0000000000000801
Tania Day, Erika Chapman-Burgess, James Scurry
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: The study's aim is to assess if vulvar psoriasis and candidiasis may be distinguished by clinical presentation and histopathologic appearance.

Methods: The pathology database identified biopsies with corneal or subcorneal neutrophils, acanthosis, and dermal lymphocytic infiltrate. Exclusions were age younger than 18 years and unavailable or uninterpretable slides. Clinical data included demographics, comorbid conditions, symptoms, examination, microbiology, treatment, and response. Histopathologic review documented site, thickness, and characteristics of stratum corneum and epidermis, distribution of neutrophils, and infiltrate. Cases were stratified by microbiologic presence or absence of Candida albicans.

Results: Biopsies from 62 women with median age of 60 years were associated with C. albicans on vulvovaginal culture in 28 (45%), whereas 26 (42%) were negative, and 8 (13%) lacked microbiologic assessment. Swab-positive women were more likely to have diabetes, receive prereferral estrogen, and report vulvar pain. Specialist clinical impression was candidiasis in 33 (53%), psoriasis in 11 (18%), comorbid candidiasis and psoriasis in 7 (11%), dermatitis in 10 (16%), and unknown in 2 (3%). Visible fungal organisms occurred in 16 (26%) cases and were associated with diabetes and satellite lesions. Other than presence of organisms, there were no histopathologic differences stratified by microbiologic result.

Conclusions: The histopathologic triad of corneal/subcorneal neutrophils, acanthosis, and dermal lymphocytic infiltrate is common to vulvar psoriasis and candidiasis, and clinical features do not reliably distinguish between them. Microbiologic assessment and single-agent treatment are useful strategies to clarify the diagnosis.

外阴银屑病与念珠菌病的临床病理重叠
研究目的该研究旨在评估外阴银屑病和念珠菌病是否可以通过临床表现和组织病理学外观加以区分:病理数据库确定了角膜或角膜下嗜中性粒细胞、棘细胞增多和真皮淋巴细胞浸润的活组织切片。年龄小于18岁、无法获得或无法解读的切片除外。临床数据包括人口统计学、合并症、症状、检查、微生物学、治疗和反应。组织病理学检查记录了病变部位、厚度、角质层和表皮的特征、中性粒细胞的分布以及浸润情况。根据微生物学上是否存在白色念珠菌对病例进行分层:中位年龄为 60 岁的 62 名妇女的活组织检查结果显示,28 人(45%)的外阴阴道培养结果与白色念珠菌有关,26 人(42%)为阴性,8 人(13%)缺乏微生物学评估。拭子阳性的妇女更有可能患有糖尿病、接受了雌激素治疗并报告外阴疼痛。专家临床印象为念珠菌病的有 33 人(53%),银屑病的有 11 人(18%),念珠菌病和银屑病合并症的有 7 人(11%),皮炎的有 10 人(16%),不明原因的有 2 人(3%)。有 16 例(26%)病例可见真菌,与糖尿病和卫星病变有关。除了出现真菌外,不同微生物学结果的组织病理学差异不大:结论:角膜/角膜下中性粒细胞、棘层增生和真皮淋巴细胞浸润的组织病理学三联征是外阴银屑病和念珠菌病的共同特征,临床特征并不能可靠地区分这两种疾病。微生物学评估和单药治疗是明确诊断的有效策略。
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来源期刊
Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease
Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
8.10%
发文量
158
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease is the source for the latest science about benign and malignant conditions of the cervix, vagina, vulva, and anus. The Journal publishes peer-reviewed original research original research that addresses prevalence, causes, mechanisms, diagnosis, course, treatment, and prevention of lower genital tract disease. We publish clinical guidelines, position papers, cost-effectiveness analyses, narrative reviews, and systematic reviews, including meta-analyses. We also publish papers about research and reporting methods, opinions about controversial medical issues. Of particular note, we encourage material in any of the above mentioned categories that is related to improving patient care, avoiding medical errors, and comparative effectiveness research. We encourage publication of evidence-based guidelines, diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms, and decision aids. Original research and reviews may be sub-classified according to topic: cervix and HPV, vulva and vagina, perianal and anal, basic science, and education and learning. The scope and readership of the journal extend to several disciplines: gynecology, internal medicine, family practice, dermatology, physical therapy, pathology, sociology, psychology, anthropology, sex therapy, and pharmacology. The Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease highlights needs for future research, and enhances health care. The Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease is the official journal of the American Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology, the International Society for the Study of Vulvovaginal Disease, and the International Federation of Cervical Pathology and Colposcopy, and sponsored by the Australian Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology and the Society of Canadian Colposcopists.
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