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Inflammatory Linear Verrucous Epidermal Nevus: A Case Report and Short Review of the Literature

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Inflammatory linear verrucous epidermal nevus (ILVEN) is a unilateral, persistent, linear, pruritic eruption that usually appears on an extremity in infancy or childhood. We present a case of ILVEN in a 4-year-old boy and provide a short review of the literature, with emphasis on our current understanding of the etiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, and management of ILVEN.


 

References

Inflammatory linear verrucous epidermal nevus (ILVEN) is a unilateral, persistent, linear, pruritic eruption that usually appears on an extremity in infancy or childhood. We present a case of ILVEN in a 4-year-old boy and provide a short review of the literature, with emphasis on our current understanding of the etiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, and management of ILVEN.

Case Report
A 4-year-old boy presented for evaluation of an extremely pruritic linear plaque involving his right groin and right thigh since the age of one year (Figure 1). The plaque first appeared on the right buttock (Figure 2) and slowly enlarged, extending down spirally to involve the right inguinal region and upper inner thigh. There was no family history of similar dermatoses.

Results of a physical examination revealed multiple erythematous warty scaling papules coalesced to form a linear, verrucous, hyperpigmented plaque. The plaque extended from the right buttock and inguinal region to the right upper medial thigh following the lines of Blaschko. The rest of the physical examination results were unremarkable, and no associated physical anomaly was found. The eruption and the associated pruritus did not respond to either oral antihistamines or topical high potency steroids. Results of a biopsy specimen taken from the lesion revealed hyperkeratosis, parakeratosis, acanthosis, and a decreased granular layer. A perivascular infiltrate of lymphocytes also was evident in the upper dermis. A diagnosis of inflammatory linear verrucous epidermal nevus (ILVEN) was made based on clinical and histopathologic grounds.


Comment
The condition later known as ILVEN was first described by Unna in 1896.1 However, it was not until 1971 that the disorder was described and clearly defined as a distinct entity by Altman and Mehregan2 in a case series of 25 patients. The authors clearly delineated ILVEN as a clinical and histopathologic variety of linear verrucous nevus that clinically appears inflammatory and histopathologically appears psoriasiform. The etiology of ILVEN remains unknown. It is considered a variant of keratinocytic epidermal nevus. Most cases are sporadic, but a familial case, with the condition occurring in a mother and her daughter, has been described.3 Because ILVEN bears some histologic resemblance to psoriasis, some authors believe that the 2 conditions share a common pathogenesis, possibly mediated by cytokines.4 There is some evidence that interleukins 1 and 6, tumor necrosis factor α, and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 are upregulated in ILVEN, similar to psoriasis.4 It also has been proposed that activation of an autosomal-dominant lethal mutation that survives by mosaicism may be the cause. The mutated cells might survive in the vicinity of the normal cells.5 ILVEN usually appears in infancy or early childhood but may be present at birth; the condition is very rarely present in adulthood.6 ILVEN occurs predominantly in females (female-male ratio, 4:1), and no racial predominance has been noted. About 6% of patients with epidermal nevi had ILVEN.6 ILVEN typically presents with multiple, discrete, erythematous, slightly warty and scaly papules that tend to coalesce into linear plaques. In a retrospective study of 23 patients with ILVEN, Lee and Rogers7 documented a predilection for the buttock and legs, and most cases were unilateral. Onset usually was within the first 6 months of life, most patients (16 patients) were male, and extension beyond the original margins occurred in 6 patients (26%).7 Altman and Mehregan2 described 6 characteristic features of ILVEN: (1) early age of onset, (2) predominance in females (4:1 female-male ratio), (3) frequent involvement of the left leg, (4) pruritus, (5) marked refractoriness to therapy, and (6) a distinctive psoriasiform and inflammatory histologic appearance. In a few children, ILVEN has been found to occur in association with musculoskeletal or other abnormalities, including supernumerary digits and strabismus,8 congenital bony anomalies of the ipsilateral extremities,9 congenital dislocation of the ipsilateral hip and Fallot tetralogy of the heart,10 autoimmune thyroiditis,11 lichen amyloidosis,12 nevus depigmentosus,13 arthritis14 and melanodontia.15 More recently, ILVEN was associated with ipsilateral undescended testicle.16 However, this finding was disputed by Happle,17 who interpreted the case as an epidermal nevus of the epidermolytic type and stated that the ipsilateral cryptorchidism should be considered as a coincidental finding. The histopathologic presentation of ILVEN is very similar to psoriasis. Results of a histologic examination reveal psoriasiform hyperplasia of the epidermis, alternating parakeratosis without a granular layer, and orthokeratosis with a thickened granular layer.18 The authors of a recent study19 looked at advanced immunohistochemical methods to differentiate ILVEN from psoriasis. The investigators found that the number of Ki-67—positive nuclei tends to be lower, and the number of keratin-10—positive cells and HLA-DR expression tend to be higher in patients with ILVEN. The density of CD8+, CD45RO+, CD2+, CD94, and CD161 also showed a marked difference between ILVEN and psoriasis. In addition, the number of T cells relevant in the pathogenesis of psoriasis was markedly reduced in ILVEN.19 Other dermatoses that need to be differentiated from ILVEN are summarized in the Table. Nevoid psoriasis in a Blaschko distribution closely mimics ILVEN, but the former usually is asymptomatic and responds well to antipsoriatic treatment. Psoriasis also may become superimposed on an epidermal nevus because of Köbnerization.20

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