Grouped as a benign epithelial tumour, lesions of porokeratosis may arise in isolation, as multiple lesions or in a particular distribution in some clinical variants. The histology is reproducible on each occasion.
Histology of porokeratosis
Scanning power view of porokeratosis reveals a hyperkeratotic lesion with a discrete parakeratotic column at the margin, or two if the whole lesion is represented (Figure 1). The diagnostic feature is the presence of a cornoid lamella which represents the clinically visible raised margin of the lesion. The cornoid lamella is a parakeratotic column overlying a small vertical zone of dyskeratotic and vacuolated cells within the epidermis (Figures 2 and 3). There is also a focal loss of the granular layer. A mild lymphocytic infiltrate may be seen around an increased number of capillaries in the underlying dermis.
Histological variants of porokeratosis
Porokeratosis of Mibelli: This prototypical lesion may demonstrate a depression in the epidermis beneath the cornoid lamella.
Disseminated superficial actinic porokeratosis: The intervening epidermis between the two cornoid lamellae may be thinned and show a prominent lichenoid of superficial perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate.
Linear and reticulate porokeratosis may show multiple cornoid lamellae. Porokeratotic adnexal ostial nevus: In this clinically distinctive variant, cornoid lamellae are seen to overly the eccrine or follicular ostia.
Porokeratosis ptychotropica: Scanning power view demonstrates a unique pattern of multiple cornoid lamella, which may be partially represented at different levels of the epidermis and arrayed at variable angles in relation to the epidermis. Dermal amyloid deposition is seen commonly, particularly in proximal intertriginous areas, which may suggest a role for friction in its aetiology.
Verrucous porokeratosis: In this variant there is prominent hyperkeratosis, which may clinically mask the cornoid lamella. This variant has been described frequently as synonymous with the lesions of porokeratosis ptychotropica. Verrucous porokeratosis also occurs in a non perianal distribution, and porokeratosis ptychotropica is commonly not hyperkeratotic, therefore this variant should be used descriptively for clinically and histologically hyperkeratotic lesions only.