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Department of Pathology 12 de Octubre, University Hospital, 28041, Madrid, Spain.
Condylomas are one of the most common human papilloma virus (HPV)-related benign lesions of the male genitourinary tract. Although rarely, HPV has also been detected along the urinary tract, using molecular techniques, in transitional cell neoplasms without microscopic signs of koilocytic atypia. When affecting the urethra, condylomas are usually limited to its third distal portion. However, transitional cell neoplasms of the urethra are exceptional and in most of the cases remain limited to its proximal portion. To the best of our knowledge, 12 cases of transitional cell carcinomas and only one case of typical transitional cell papilloma have been described in the anterior urethra. We report two exceptional cases of typical transitional cell papilloma of the glans of the penis near the fossa navicularis which showed microscopic signs of HPV infection.
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