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Verrucous carcinoma: a difficult differential diagnosis

Verrucous carcinoma: a difficult differential diagnosis

Brendan Guegan1,&

 

1Department of Oral Surgery, Nimes University Hospital, Nimes, France

 

 

&Corresponding author
Brendan Guegan, Department of Oral Surgery, Nimes University Hospital, Nimes, France

 

 

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A woman aged 85 years old was followed up for a giant verrucous carcinoma of the oral cavity. Looking at the patient´s history, P16 was not over-expressed, Ki67 was expressed in basal layers, and no HPV was detected. Significant squamous hyperplasia of verrucous architecture with parakeratosis. Ulcerated areas are present on the surface. The chorion is the site of a moderate lymphocytic and plasma cell inflammatory infiltrate associated with numerous neutrophils in intraepithelial exocytosis with the formation of superficial micro-abscesses. Treatment with external radiotherapy, with an incomplete response rate, is to be completed with surgical removal. Difficult diagnosis between verrucous hyperplasia, proliferative verrucous leukoplasia and verrucous carcinoma. The essential rule in this type of lesion is the importance of deep and multiple biopsies, to rule out conventional squamous cell carcinoma and to distinguish verrucous carcinoma from verrucous hyperplasia and proliferative verrucous leukoplasia.

Figure 1: verrucous carcinoma