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Intraepithelial Neoplasia (Dysplasia )(CIS)
Etiology:

Majority associated with human papilloma virus infection
Minority arise in setting of squamous hyperplasia
Pathogenesis:

HPV infection integrates into host cell genome
Integration may alter either p53 or retinoblastoma gene activity
Unknown in non-HPV associated patients.
Epidemiology:

Historically disease of elderly women
Multicentric, HPV associated lesions now seen increasing in women under 40.
Immunosupression.
General Gross Description:

white patches "leukoplakia" are common
red patches may also be seen
General Microscopic Description:

loss of a single basal layer with crowding of the squamous cells, hyperchromasia of the nuclei, and failure to mature
mitotic figures seen above the basal cell layer
thickened epithelium which may contain koilocytes
mild (VIN1) when abnormal cells involve 2/3 of thickness
Clinical Correlations:

Lesions may be asymptomatic or causing pruritus
Usually found on pelvic examination
May be treated with ablation
References:
• Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL. Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th edition. W.B. Saunders Philadelphia 1994. pp. 1041-1042.