Conjunctival Intraepithelial Neoplasia Mimicking a Pigmentary Lesion in an HIV-Seropositive Indian Male
Jhimli Ta, Varsha Manade, Megha R Kotecha, Surbhi A Chodvadiya, Jessica Sangwan

TL;DR
A young HIV-positive man had a conjunctival lesion mistaken for a pigmentary issue, but it was actually a neoplastic growth requiring aggressive treatment.
Contribution
Highlights the atypical presentation of OSSN in young HIV-positive patients and the need for aggressive management.
Findings
Conjunctival intraepithelial neoplasia was confirmed via excisional biopsy in an HIV-seropositive patient.
Adjuvant mitomycin eye drops prevented lesion recurrence at one-month follow-up.
OSSN can present atypically in young HIV-positive individuals without classic signs.
Abstract
We present the case of a 27-year-old male who presented to our ophthalmology outpatient clinic with a pigmented lesion on the conjunctiva of his right eye. There was no history of ocular trauma or familial ocular complaints, and a thorough evaluation revealed the patient's seropositive status for HIV for the past eight years. The presentation resembled a conjunctival pigmentary lesion, with typical features of ocular surface squamous neoplasia (OSSN) being absent and a demographic incongruent with typical OSSN cases as OSSN typically affects the elderly population. Given the patient's HIV status and the lesion's recent increase in size, a more aggressive treatment approach was warranted. Mass excisional biopsy surgery confirmed conjunctival intraepithelial neoplasia with one positive margin. Adjuvant treatment with mitomycin eye drops (0.04%) resulted in no lesion recurrence at the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Oncology and Treatments · Ocular Diseases and Behçet’s Syndrome · Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research
