BenignHPVcSCC mimicICD-10 B07.0

Verruca vulgaris (common warts)

Common warts; verrucae; viral warts; HPV-induced cutaneous warts; periungual warts; subungual warts

Verruca vulgaris is one of the commonest cutaneous infections, caused by epidermotropic strains of human papillomavirus (HPV-1, -2, -4, -27, -57 most common cutaneous types). It presents as firm hyperkeratotic papules with characteristic punctate haemorrhages from thrombosed dermal capillaries on dermoscopy. Skin-oncology relevance is twofold — persistent verrucous lesions, especially periungual / subungual / chronic plantar, can be biopsied as suspected cSCC or keratoacanthoma, and chronic warts in immunosuppressed patients (organ-transplant recipients, HIV, chemotherapy) raise concern for HPV-driven cSCC particularly at digital and anogenital sites.

CurrentLast reviewed 15 May 2026

Clinical features

  • Firm, hyperkeratotic, rough-surfaced papule with central punctate haemorrhages.
  • Common sites — hands (dorsa, fingers), periungual, plantar surface, knees.
  • Multiple in immunosuppressed (transplant recipients, HIV, chemotherapy) and children.
  • Filiform variant — thread-like projections on the face, eyelids, neck.
  • Mosaic variant — confluent plaque of multiple warts on the plantar surface.
  • Spontaneous resolution within 2 years in 65% of children.

Dermoscopy

  • Multiple punctate haemorrhages corresponding to thrombosed papillary dermal capillaries — pathognomonic for verruca.
  • Hyperkeratotic surface; disruption of dermatoglyphics on the palm / sole.
  • White background with capillary loops on dermoscopy.
  • Absence of pigment network, polymorphous vessels, atypical structures.
  • Distinguishes from plantar callus (no capillaries; preserved dermatoglyphics) and amelanotic acral melanoma.

Differential

  • cSCC — persistent verrucous lesion, especially periungual / digital, particularly in immunosuppressed.
  • Subungual SCC — chronic nail dystrophy / paronychia; HPV-16 association.
  • Bowenoid papulosis — pigmented HPV-driven anogenital papules; HPV-16/18.
  • Seborrhoeic keratosis — stuck-on appearance, fingerprint pigmentation.
  • Plantar callus — physiological hyperkeratosis without capillaries.
  • Acquired digital fibrokeratoma.
  • Lichen planus — flat-topped, violaceous, polygonal.

Management

  • Most warts self-resolve — observation is reasonable, particularly in children.
  • Topical salicylic acid 12–17% with occlusion / paring; 12-week courses.
  • Cryotherapy with liquid nitrogen — every 2–3 weeks for 4–6 cycles.
  • Cantharidin, podophyllotoxin, fluorouracil 5% topical, imiquimod 5% — alternatives.
  • Pulsed-dye laser, CO₂ laser, electrocautery — for refractory.
  • Bleomycin intralesional, immunotherapy with squaric acid dibutyl ester (SADBE) or diphencyprone (DCP) — specialist option.
  • Biopsy any verrucous lesion that is: persistent > 6 months despite treatment, in an immunosuppressed patient, at a site with HPV-driven malignancy risk (anogenital, periungual), or with atypical clinical features. Histology to exclude cSCC / Bowen disease.
  • HPV vaccination relevant for OTRs and HPV-driven cancer risk.

References

  1. Sterling JC, Gibbs S, Haque Hussain SS, Mohd Mustapa MF, Handfield-Jones SE. British Association of Dermatologists' guidelines for the management of cutaneous warts 2014. Br J Dermatol. 2014;171(4):696-712.

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