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Wendy Chen, MD, PhD: PGY-3 Charleen T. Chu, MD, PhD: Neuropathology. Ocular Pathology Clinical Case January 2010. History of Present Illness. 50 yo Caucasian male presenting with right lower eyelid erythema and thickening. Itchy Erythema fluctuates, worse after sun exposure
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Wendy Chen, MD, PhD: PGY-3 Charleen T. Chu, MD, PhD: Neuropathology Ocular PathologyClinical CaseJanuary 2010
History of Present Illness • 50 yo Caucasian male presenting with right lower eyelid erythema and thickening. • Itchy • Erythema fluctuates, worse after sun exposure • No change in vision • Some AM eyelid matting/crusting
HPI cont’d • Seen by dermatologist in 2006 -- bilateral periorbital rash, erythematous and itchy, scaling plaques, worsened by sun exposure. • ? Rosacea ---> treated with Akne-mycin (erythromycin 2%) without improvement. • Punch biopsy of LEFT lower eyelid
HPI cont’d • Dermatopathology report: “lichenoid dermatitis with deep perivascular extension of the infiltrate . . . lupus erythematosis vs. lichenoid photodermatitis” • Subsequently, • PAS stain: thickened basement membrane • Colloidal iron: focal increase in dermal mucin • Favoring discoid lupus erythematosis
HPI cont’d • Treated with Protopic (tacrolimus 0.1%) – bilateral periorbital rash improved. • Serologic testing: • ANA, RF, Anti-DNA, Anti-histone, Anti-SS A/B negative. • C3, C4 WNL • CBC, LFTs, BMP WNL • RPR non-reactive
HPI cont’d • Over the next 3 years, pt continued to have intermittent flares of periorbital, facial, and scalp rashes ---> continued Protopic. • In 2009, presented to dermatology again with persistent RLL erythema and thickening accompanied by erythematous pustules of the face ---> acne rosacea • To ophthalmology for second opinion
Medical History • Past Medical/Surgical History • Acne rosacea • Lupus erythematosis, DISCOID, not systemic • Anxiety, Depression • S/P hernia repair • Past Ocular History • S/P left periorbital skin bx • Hyperopia • Astigmatism • Social History • Tob – none • EtOH – social use • Drugs – none • Excessive sun exposure and multiple severe sunburns prior to age 18 • Medications • Topical tacrolimus 0.1% prn • Lexapro • Ativan
Initial Exam Va CC: 20/20 OU Pupils: No APD IOP: 14 OU EOM: Full OU CVF: Full OU
Differential Diagnosis • Ocular rosacea – typically bilateral, but can be asymmetric. • Discoid lupus without systemic involvement. • Infectious – viral, bacterial, fungal. • Malignancy – basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, sebaceous adenocarcinoma.
Approach to management • Rosacea-associated blepharitis ---> Blephamide BID with resolution of symptoms. • Returned 5 months later with RLL recurrence (slow return of symptoms). • Referred to oculoplastics for biopsy.
Work-up • Wedge resection of lateral portion of the RLL lesion in Oct 2009. • Conjunctival cultures taken: • Fungus culture negative • Virus culture negative • Bacterial culture with light coag neg Staph • Adenovirus PCR negative • HSV1/2 PCR negative
Hyperkeratosis Acanthosis Squamous cell nests and strands infiltrating the dermis
Pathology report • EYELID RIGHT LOWER, WEDGE BIOPSY • A. SUPERFICIALLY INVASIVE SQUAMOUS CELL CARCINOMA (0.2 CM, 0.1 CMTHICK), WELL DIFFERENTIATED • NO ANGIOLYMPHATIC OR PERINEURAL INVASION PRESENT. • MARGINS FREE OF TUMOR.
Clinical course cont’d • Pt continued to have persistent RLL erythema and thickening. • Re-excision of adjacent area performed Nov. 2009, given prior diagnosis ---> suture with foreign body giant cell reaction, acute and chronic inflammation and fibrosis.
Clinical course cont’d • Started po Doxycycline 100mg daily for further treatment of ocular rosacea. • Patient was followed q4 months for 1 yr with waxing and waning progression of RLL lesion. • Most recent visit revealed a change in appearance of RLL.
Prior biopsy site Vertical extension of the lesion with minor distortion of lid architecture
Management cont’d • Given the recent change in the appearance of the lesion and prior diagnosis of carcinoma, a repeat wedge resection was performed in January 2011 on the medial portion of the RLL lesion.
Dense interface dermatitis, architectural distortion. Keratin pearl
Maturation & narrow strand-like extensions suggest pseudocarcinomatous hyperplasia Thick basement membrane
Re-review of prior excisions • Review of initial wedge excision revealed that the diagnosis of carcinoma may have been incorrect. • Prolonged clinical history of rashes, chronic inflammation and suspicion of DLE were not known to the original pathologist. • Both excisions showed: • SQUAMOPROLIFERATIVE LESIONS WITH PSEUDOEPITHELIOMATOUS HYPERPLASIA.
Squamous Cell Carcinoma • 10-40X less common than basal cell carcinoma. • Typically arise from actinic keratoses. • Lower eyelid most common ocular site. • Histologic characteristics: • Hyperkeratosis, acanthosis • Interface dermatitis, infiltrative nests and strands • Keratinocyte nuclear hyperchromasia and maturational ayptia, mitotic figures • Keratin pearls, dyskeratotic cells
Pseudocarcinomatous Hyperplasia (also known as pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia) • Chronic inflammation can result in histologic changes that mimic invasive squamous carcinoma. • Features that can help differentiate PCH/PEH from SCC: • Narrow, strand-like infiltration of epithelium • Tangential section can result in isolation from surface • Lack of dysplastic hyperchromatic nuclei, lack of maturational atypia • Reactive atypia – pale nuclei with uniform nucleoli
Eyelid involvement by chronic cutaneous lupus (CCL) • Systemic lupus more commonly causes corneal lesions, retinal vasculopathy • keratoconjunctivitis sicca, peripheral ulcerative keratitis, interstitial keratitis • Very rarely can give isolated lid lesions that mimic malignancy • CCL variants • Discoid lupus erythematosis – plaque lesions • Lupus erythematosis profundus (panniculitis) • Systemic disease - idiopathic orbital edema
Eyelid involvement by chronic cutaneous lupus • Unlike regular pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia, significant cytologic atypia (N/C ratio, hyperchromasia, mitoses) can occur. • Features that help differentiate DLE from SCC: • History of chronicity, rashes • SCC shows rapid onset/growth (< 6 mo), nodular or ulcerative changes. • Intradermal mucin (colloidal iron) • Thickened basement membrane (PAS) Papalas et al. “Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus of the Eyelid as a Mimic of Squamous Epithelial Malignancies” Ophthal Plast Reconstr Surg 2010.
Distinguishing features cont’d • Features that help differentiate CCL from SCC: • Perifollicular and acrosyringeal inflammation • Follicular plugging • Vacuolar interface change • Compact orthokeratosis • The “helpful” features may not be present or may not be recognized without a high index of suspicion • 37% of cutaneous LE cases incorrectly interpreted initially even by Board certified dermatopathologists Zedek et al. “Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosis simulating squamous neoplasia: The clinicopathologic conundrum and histopathologic pitfalls” J Am Acad Dermatol 2007; 56: 1013-20.
Summary • Persistent unilateral lower lid erythema/thickening despite treatment of discoid lupus and ocular rosacea warrants biopsy. • SCC can develop in lesions of discoid LE • The histologic DDx includes actinic keratosis/SCC, lichen planus-like keratosis & PCH/PEH • Combination of cytologic atypia from lupus and PCH/PEH (which normally lacks atypia) is a diagnostic pitfall • Chronic history and suspicion of lupus would raise the awareness threshold to prevent overcalling the lesion • Providing clinical history is key to avoiding misdiagnosis >> rare mimics of a common neoplasm