Lichen planus
Background
- Uncommon disorder of unknown cause, likely T-cell mediated autoimmunity against basal kertinocytes
- Most common in patients aged 30 to 60 years
- HCV association is controversial
- Drug exposure can resemble idiopathic lichen planus
Affected areas
- Skin (cutaneous lichen planus)
- Oral cavity (oral lichen planus)
- Genitalia (penile or vulvar lichen planus)
- Scalp (lichen planopilaris)
- Nails
- Esophagus
Clinical Features
Cutaneous Lichen Planus
Predominantly on ankles and volar surface of wrists
- Four “P’s”
- Pruritic
- Purple
- Polygonal
- Papules or plaques
- Wickham’s striae: Fine white lines visible on surface of papules or plaques
- Koebner reaction: Lesions develop in areas of trauma (e.g., scratching)
Cutaneous variants
Hypertrophic lichen planus
- Intensely pruritic, flat-topped plaques
- Common sites are extensor surfaces of lower extremities
Atrophic lichen planus
- Violaceous, round or oval, atrophic plaques
- Common sites are legs
- Often resolution of annular or hypertrophic lesions
Annular lichen planus
- Violaceous plaques with central clearing
- Common sites are penis, scrotum, and intertriginous areas
Bullous lichen planus
- Vesicles or bullae within existing lesions
- Common sites are legs
Actinic lichen planus (lichen planus tropicus)
- Photodistributed eruption of hyperpigmented macules, annular papules, or plaques
- Most common in Africa, Middle East, and India
Lichen planus pigmentosus
- Gray-brown or dark brown macules or patches
- Sun-exposed or flexural areas
- Pruritus minimal or absent
Inverse lichen planus
- Erythematous to violaceous papules and plaques
- Intertriginous sites (e.g., axillae, inguinal creases, inframammary area, limb flexures)
- Hyperpigmentation is common
- Scales and erosions may be present
Overlap syndromes
- Lichen planus pemphigoides
- Lichen planus-lupus erythematosus overlap syndrome
Other forms of lichen planus
- Nail lichen planus
- Varies from minor atrophy to total nail loss
- Lichen planopilaris (follicular lichen planus)
- Keratotic papules that may coalesce into plaques
- Classic site is the scalp
- May be in other body sites (e.g., Graham-Little-Piccardi-Lasseur syndrome)
- Untreated, can result in scarring and permanent alopecia
- Oral lichen planus
- Painful, frequent loss of appetite
- May lead to secondary candida infection
- Genital lichen planus
- Involves glans of penis or epithelium of vulva, vestibule, vagina, and mouth
- Often resistant to treatment
- Esophageal lichen planus
- Associated dysphagia or odynophagia
- Concomitant oral, genital, or cutaneous lichen planus
- Otic lichen planus
- Erythema, induration, and stenosis of external auditory canal
- Thickening of TM
- Otorrhea
- Hearing loss
Differential diagnosis
The differential diagnosis for lichen planus includes:
- Chronic graft-versus-host disease
- Psoriasis
- Atopic dermatitis
- Lichen simplex chronicus
- Subacute cutaneous or discoid lupus erythematosus
- Pityriasis rosea
- Secondary syphilis
- Prurigo nodularis
- Paraneoplastic pemphigus/paraneoplastic autoimmune multiorgan syndrome (PAMS)
- Oral leukoplakia
- Oral candidiasis
- Pemphigus vulgaris, benign mucous membrane pemphigoid
- Lichenoid drug eruption
- Antimicrobials: aminosalicylate sodium, ethambutol, griseofulvin, ketoconazole, streptomycin, tetracycline, trovafloxacin, isoniazid
- Antihistamines: ranitidine, roxatidine
- Antihypertensives/antiarrhythmics: ACE-inhibitors, doxazosin, beta blockers, methyldopa, prazosin, nifedipine, quinidine
- Antimalarial drugs: chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine, quinine
- Antidepressants/anxiolytics/antipsychotics/AEDs: amitriptyline, carbamazepine, chlorpromazine, levomepromazine, methoprazine, imipramine, lorazepam, phenytoin
- Diuretics: thiazide diuretics, furosemide, spironolactone
- Antidiabetics: sulfonylureas
- Metals: gold salts, arsenic, bismuth, mercury, palladium, lithium
- NSAIDs
- Proton pump inhibitors: omeprazole, lansoprazole, pantoprazole
- Lipid lowering drugs: pravastatin, simvastatin, gemfibrozil
- TNF-alpha antagonists: infliximab, adalimumab, etanercept, lenercept
- Varia: allopurinol, bleomycin, cinnarizine, cyanamide, dapsone, hydroxyurea, hepatitis B-vaccine, imatinib, immunoglobulins, interferon alfa, l-thyroxin, levamisole, mesalamine, methycran, penicillamine, procainamide, pyrimethamine, pyrithioxine, quinacrine, sildenafil, sulfasalazine, terbinafine, trihexyphenidyl, ursodeoxycholic acid
Plaques
- Psoriasis
- Bowen disease
- Discoid lupus erythematosus
- Drug eruption
- Erythema annulare centrifugum
- Lichen planus
- Lichen simplex chronicus
- Nummular dermatitis (nummular eczema)
- Parapsoriasis
- Pityriasis rosea
- Seborrheic dermatitis
Diagnosis
- Clinical diagnosis
- Workup outside of ED may include:
- Punch biopsy or shave biopsy
- Immunofluorescence studies if bullous lesions present
- Routine HCV testing controversial
Management
Cutaneous
- Self-limiting disease, usually resolves within 8-12 months
- First-line
- Topical corticosteroid
- High potency (e.g., trunk, extremities)
- 0.05% betamethasone dipropionate cream/ointment BID
- 0.05% diflorasone diacetate cream/ointment BID
- Mid- or low-potency (e.g., intertriginous areas, facial skin)
- High potency (e.g., trunk, extremities)
- Intralesional corticosteroids (hypertrophic lichen planus)
- 2.5 to 10 mg/ml triamcinolone acetonide q4-6 weeks
- Topical corticosteroid
- Second-line therapy
- For generalized disease or local corticosteroid-refractory disease
- Oral glucocorticoids
- Optimal dose/duration unknown
- 30 to 60 mg qd 4-6 weeks followed by 4-6 week taper
- Phototherapy (e.g, Ultraviolet B, psoralen plus Ultraviolet A)
- Oral acitretin
- Oral glucocorticoids
- For generalized disease or local corticosteroid-refractory disease
Genital
- Topical corticosteroids or topical calcineurin inhibitors
Lichen planopilaris
- Topical corticosteroids or intralesional corticosteroids
Oral
- Topical corticosteroids
Nail
- Systemic or intralesional corticosteroids
Disposition
- Outpatient treatment
Prognosis
Cutaneous lichen planus
- Remits within 1 to 2 years
Oral, genital, scalp, and nail lichen planus
- More persistent and resistant to therapy
- Squamous cell carcinoma risk is unclear (highest risk with erythematous or erosive oral and genital lichen planus)
Monitor for medication adverse effects
See Also
External Links
References
- Goldstein, BG, Goldstein, AO, Mostow, E. Lichen planus. In: UpToDate, Dellavalle, RP, Callen, J (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA, 2017.