| Literature DB >> 33912285 |
Moshawa Calvin Khaba1, Matsiane Luciah Lekala2, Setheme Daniel Mosehle2.
Abstract
Malignant melanoma of the vulva is a rare and aggressive tumour with dismal prognosis. It tends to recur and metastasize early. Surgical excision with or without regional lymph node dissection is still the treatment of choice with adjuvant therapy decided on a case by case. Furthermore, HIV infection has been associated with more aggressive disease. Herein we present a 45-year-old HIV-infected female patient on antiretroviral therapy who presented with vulval ulcer for one year. On examination, she had ulcerated nodule on the labia majora. Radiology showed vulvovaginal tumour without involvement of the adjacent organs. Malignant melanoma was confirmed on both the incisional biopsy and vulvectomy. She responded poorly to radiotherapy. Furthermore, she presented with recurrence and metastatic disease a month after surgery. She was lost to follow-up clinic. Copyright: Moshawa Calvin Khaba et al.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; case report; malignant; metastasis; nodular melanoma
Year: 2021 PMID: 33912285 PMCID: PMC8051228 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2021.38.115.25864
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1A) initial normal appearing CXR; B) metastasis evidenced by upper lobes nodular infiltrate and pleural effusion; this CXR was performed after 1 month of surgery; C) pelvic MRI reveals an ill-defined vulvovaginal tumour not involving the bladder, uterus or rectum; D) CT scan show right inguinal lymphadenopathy
Figure 2A) ulcerated and multinodular tumour with focal labia majora; B) cut section show nodular, white-tan and hemorrhagic tumour; C) uninvolved epithelium; D) ulcerated epithelium with underlying nodular tumour; E) large, atypical cells with vesicular nuclei and prominent inclusion-like nucleoli; F) immunohistochemistry show tumour cells immunoreactive for Melan A