A 63-YEAR-OLD MAN came to our clinic complaining of a rash on his penis. He indicated that the rash had been there for almost 2 years and that he’d seen 2 other doctors about it, but they’d been unable to make a diagnosis.
The patient said the rash was mildly painful and tender. He denied pain on urination, discharge, fever, malaise, or arthralgias. He also denied any sexual contact outside of his marriage and indicated that he had not been able to have intimate contact with his wife because of the problem.
The patient was uncircumcised and when the foreskin was retracted, a bright red erythematous nonscaly circumferential plaque was visible on the glans penis, spreading to the foreskin (FIGURE 1).
FIGURE 1
A nonscaly, circumferential plaque on the glans penis
WHAT IS YOUR DIAGNOSIS?
HOW WOULD YOU TREAT THIS PATIENT?