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Urethral lichen sclerosus under the microscope: a survey of academic pathologists.

Authors :
Erickson BA
Tesdahl BA
Voznesensky MA
Breyer BN
Voelzke BB
Alsikafi NF
Vanni AJ
Broghammer JA
Buckley JC
Myers JB
Brant WO
Zhao LC
Smith Iii TG
Swick BL
Dahmoush L
Source :
The Canadian journal of urology [Can J Urol] 2018 Jun; Vol. 25 (3), pp. 9328-9333.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Introduction: Given the poor understanding of the pathophysiology of genital lichen sclerosus (GLS) and a lack of accepted definitive diagnostic criteria, we proposed to survey pathologists regarding their understanding of GLS. We hypothesized that significant disagreement about GLS will exist.<br />Materials and Methods: All urologists participating in the Trauma and Urologic Reconstruction Network of Surgeons identified genitourinary (GUP) and dermatopathologists (DP) at their respective institutions who were then invited to participate in an online survey regarding their experience with diagnosing GLS, GLS pathophysiology and its relationship to urethral stricture disease.<br />Results: There were 23 (12 DP, 11 GUP) pathologists that completed the survey. The most agreed upon criteria for diagnosis were dermal collagen homogenization (85.7%), loss of the normal rete pattern (33.3%) and atrophic epidermis (28.5%). No pathologists believed GLS had an infectious etiology (19% maybe, 42% unknown) and 19% believed GLS to be an autoimmune disorder (42% maybe, 38% unknown); 19% believed LS to be premalignant, but 52% believed it was associated with cancer; 80% believed that LS could involve the urethra (DP (92%) versus GUP (67%); p = 0.272). Of those diagnosing urethral GLS, 80% of DUP believed that GLS must first involve the glans/prepuce before involving the urethra, while all GUP believed that urethral disease could exist in isolation (p = 0.007).<br />Conclusions: There was significant disagreement in this specialized cohort of pathologists when diagnosing GLS. A logical first step appears to be improving agreement on how to best describe and classify the disease. This may lead to improve treatments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1195-9479
Volume :
25
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Canadian journal of urology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29900821