Perianal Paget disease associated with non-invasive colorectal adenoma

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Abstract

Perianal skin Paget disease (PPD) is an unusual subtype of extramammary Paget disease, which is usually caused by a primary intraepithelial adnexal tumor and secondary spread from colorectal adenocarcinoma. The reports of secondary PPD associated with non-invasive colorectal adenoma are rare. We report a rare case of non-invasive colorectal-adenoma-associated PPD. In this case, the intraepithelial Paget cells of perianal skin manifested with colorectal phenotype by immunohistochemistry, and adjacent adenomas had high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia but not invasion. Although this is a rare manifestation of PPD, understanding this phenomenon is important to prevent overdiagnosis and invasive overtreatment. Clinical management is variable and, therefore, close follow-up examination is necessary.

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Zuo, Z., Wu, W., Li, X., Zhang, L., Wang, J., Guo, Z., … Zhang, Q. (2023). Perianal Paget disease associated with non-invasive colorectal adenoma. Journal of Cutaneous Pathology, 50(1), 35–38. https://doi.org/10.1111/cup.14314

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