Untitled Quiz | Dermatol Pract Concept 2015;5(4):14 57 DERMATOLOGY PRACTICAL & CONCEPTUAL www.derm101.com The patient A 42-year-old male, phototype III-IV, presented with an 8-month history of gradually enlarging pigmentation on the second finger of his left hand. He had no personal or familial history of skin cancer. No cryotherapy or other procedure was performed in this location. Naked-eye examination revealed an irregular hyperpigmented plaque extending from proximal to lateral nail fold, which appeared irregularly shaped and with fuzzy borders (Figure 1a). Dermoscopy showed a brown-colored area displaying parallel pattern with pigment both in furrows and ridges and a white structureless area in the proximal nail fold; in the distal part of the lateral nail fold and in the hyponychia, a slightly verrucous area with irregular light brown pigmenta- tion was noted (Figure 1b). Irregular pigmentation of acro- syringia was also observed. Two punch biopsies were taken from the proximal and distal areas of the lesion. Histopathology reported acanthosis, hyperkeratosis and full thickness atypia of epidermal kerati- nocytes, and melanin in the lower epidermis (Figure 2). What is your diagnosis? A pigmented lesion on the finger Gabriel Salerni1,2, Carlos Alonso1,2, Mario Squeff1, Mario Gorosito3, Ramón A. Fernández-Bussy1 1 Dermatology Department, Hospital Provincial del Centenario de Rosario and Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Argentina 2 Diagnóstico Médico Oroño, Rosario, Argentina 3 Pathology Department, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Argentina Citation: Salerni G, Alonso C, Squeff M, Gorosito M, Fernández-Bussy RA. A pigmented lesion on the finger. Dermatol Pract Concept 2015;5(4):14. doi: 10.5826/dpc.0504a14 Copyright: ©2015 Salerni et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Corresponding author: Gabriel E. Salerni, MD, PhD, Urquiza 3100. 2000 Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina. Tel. +54 341 4398586. Email: gabrielsalerni@gmail.com Figure 1. Clinical image showing an irregular hyperpigmented plaque on the second finger of the left hand (a). Dermoscopy showed a brown-colored area displaying a parallel pattern and a white-col- ored area in the proximal nail fold; in the distal part of the lateral nail fold and in the hyponychia, a slightly verrucous area with irreg- ular light brown pigmentation was noted (b). Irregular pigmentation of acrosyringia was also observed (b, arrows). [Copyright: ©2015 Salerni et al.] mailto:gabrielsalerni@gmail.com 58 Quiz | Dermatol Pract Concept 2015;5(4):14 Dermoscopy may be considered as a helpful tool for increasing the diagnostic accuracy of BD. Glomerular vessels plus a scaly surface was the most frequent combination of criteria in pigmented and non-pigmented BD. In PBD, small brown globules and/or homogeneous pigmentation can be seen in addition [1]. The correct classification of non-melanocytic origin of the lesion was therefore achieved only after histological evalua- tion. Despite its rarity, PBD should be included among those lesions that may simulate cutaneous melanoma. References 1. Zalaudek I, Argenziano G, Leinweber B, et al. Dermoscopy of Bowen’s disease. Br J Dermatol. 2004;150(6):1112-6. 2. Gutiérrez-Mendoza D, Narro-Llorente R, Karam-Orantes M, et al. Dermoscopy clues in Pigmented Bowen’s Disease. Dermatol Res Pract. 2010;2010: 464821. 3. Cameron A, Rosendahl C, Tschandl P, et al. Dermatoscopy of pig- mented Bowen’s disease. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2010;62(4):597-604. 4. Firooz A, Farsi N, Rashighi-Firoozabadi M, et al. Pigmented Bowen’s disease of the finger mimicking malignant melanoma. Arch Iran Med. 2007;10(2):255-7. 5. Saxena A, Kasper DA, Campanelli CD, et al. Pigmented Bowen’s disease clinically mimicking melanoma of the nail. Dermatol Surg. 2006;32(12):1522-5. Diagnosis Pigmented Bowen’s disease Clinical course In a second procedure, the lesion was excised completely. Polymerase chain reaction sampling was positive for human papillomavirus (HPV). Answer and explanation Bowen’s disease (BD) is an in situ squamous cell carcinoma of the skin and mucous membranes that typically presents as a scaly erythematous plaque. BD can be induced by sun exposure, chronic arsenic exposure, radiation, trauma and human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Pigmented Bowen’s disease (PBD) is an unusual form of the disease, which gener- ally presents as a hyperpigmented, well-demarcated plaque with a scaly or hyperkeratotic surface. Pigmented Bowen’s disease (PBD) may clinically present with a variable amount of pigmentation and simulate seborrheic keratosis, actinic keratosis, basal cell carcinoma, atypical nevus, or melanoma [1-3]. Only few cases of PBD located on the finger have been reported in the literature [4,5]. Figure 2. Acanthosis, hyperkeratosis and full thickness atypia of epidermal keratinocytes. Dilated capillaries in the dermal papillae and melanin pigment in the lower epidermis (a). Hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) x20. Large, round and hyperchromatic nuclei with mitoses were contained in dermal papillae (b). H&E x40. [Copyright: ©2015 Salerni et al.]