Introduction:
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is
endemo-epidemic in the center and south of Tunisia. We report a
verrucous form mimicking squamous cell carcinoma.
Case presentation:
A 80- year old woman with no medical record is presented to our
department for a 3-month history of budding tumor on her left leg. It
had started as a papule which progressively enlarged and became
verrucous. Physical examination shows a painless verrucous mass
measuring 5 cm in diameter, on the external face of the left leg’s lower
extremity (Figure 1). There were no palpable regional nodes. The leg
lesion was biopsied (Figure 2, 3). Histopathology revealed epidermal
hyperkeratosis with a dense inflammatory infiltration of lymphocytes,
plasmocytes and histiocytes (Figure 2) containing intracellular
basophilic small and rounded structures which turned blue after Giemsa’s
staining; these organisms were consistent with leishmaniaamastigotes (Fig.3). The diagnosis of verrucous and pseudotumoral
cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) was established. The patient was treated by
cryotherapy once a week for 4 months with good results: the lesion
has almost been completely resolved at 5 months, leaving a dyschromic
scar.
Discussion:
Leishmaniasis is a protozoan infection that occurs worldwide. It has
diverse clinical presentations and may represent a public health problem
in endemic countries [1]. Various clinical forms can be encountered
such as: the ulcerated and crusted form, the lupoïd form, the
sporotrichoïd form and other rare forms (eczematiform,
erysipeloid, psoriasiform, verrucous, and pseudotumoral) [2]. These
uncommon presentations represent 2-5% of CL clinical presentations
[3]. Small number of cases of verrucous and tumor-like forms had
been reported in previous series [2]. The most important
differential diagnosis is the verrucous variant of squamous cell
carcinoma [4]. The diagnosis of CL may be made using several
methods. The most common ones are tissue smear and skin biopsy with
Giemsa staining in order to identify Leishmania amastigotes. The
culture enables to identify the specimen but PCR has a higher
sensitivity. The treatment of CL can be topical or systemic.
Cryotherapy alone can be efficient, particularly in the case of a small
number of lesions [5]. Most of the published cases of verrucous CL
were treated systemically [2,3,4].
The peculiarity of our case consists in its striking resemblance to
verrucous squamous cell carcinoma which refers to the verrucous and
pseudotumoral presentation, and the response to cryotherapy without need
for systemic treatment.