For Healthcare Professionals Only
The therapy of molluscum contagiosum is divided into three treatment groups: children, adults, and the immunosuppressed. Molluscum contagiosum limited to the genital area in children should raise the possibility of child abuse.
Children may have a few lesions or many lesions (50 to hundreds).
Over 50 lesions
Under 50 lesions
If the number of lesions is manageable and the child is at least in part cooperative, multiple topical therapies may work.
Molluscum contagiosum in normal adults is usually an STD and is found in the genital area. Adults with extensive lesions outside the genital area must be evaluated for immunosuppression, especially HIV infection.
One treatment is usually inadequate to eradicate all lesions. See the patient at biweekly intervals until no lesions are present, then 4-6 weeks after the last visit for a final check.
In severe immunosuppression, especially in advanced AIDS, extensive facial or genital molluscum are very common. Total cure is almost impossible. (Individual lesions in general do not spontaneously resolve as in healthy adults and children.) Lesions are treated for cosmesis at the patient's request.
Molluscum contagiosum in the setting of HIV infection is a direct consequence of significant immunosuppression. The treatment of choice is institution of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART). Once the helper T cell count exceeds 100, the molluscum begin to resolve, leaving no scars. This takes several months. Aggressive therapy that potentially would scar should not be undertaken until the full beneficial effects of immune reconstitution have been realized.
In the setting of immunosuppression, other infectious agents (e.g., herpes simplex, cryptococcus neoformans) may produce lesions mimicking molluscum contagiosum. If there is any question as to the correct diagnosis, a biopsy is in
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