Diagnosis and management of vulval lesions

Claire Haigh & Gayle Fischer et al. · 2025-07-25

Purpose of review

The vulva is part of the skin. A wide spectrum of dermatological diseases affects the vulva, including infections, dermatoses, manifestations of hormonal and systemic conditions, and neoplasia. Vulval diseases are typically associated with significant delay in diagnosis due to limited healthcare practitioner knowledge amongst primary care physicians and specialists alike. This review article provides an update on the diagnosis and management of common vulval lesions.

Recent findings

This article reviews the literature on vulval lesions and vulval dermatoses and was conducted through searching PubMed. Common causes of vulval lesions are presented, including vulval cancer, vulval squamous intraepithelial lesions, dermatitis, psoriasis, lichen simplex chronicus, acute and chronic candida vulvovaginitis, lichen sclerosus, lichen planus, and nonsexually acquired genital ulceration.

Summary

Vulval complaints are common. It is important to not only be able to differentiate between benign findings and potentially premalignant or malignant lesions but also recognise and manage common causes of vulval lesions such as dermatitis, psoriasis, lichen sclerosus, infectious causes of disease, and nonsexually acquired genital ulceration.

Authors
Claire Haigh, Helen Yiling Sun, Gayle Fischer