AskAwayHealth

Sign in to your account

Don't have an account?

Create an account

AskAwayHealth

Request a reset

Don't have an account?

Create an account

AskAwayHealth

Reset your password

Don't have an account?

Create an account

AskAwayHealth

Lichen Sclerosus: The Vulval Condition That Takes Years to Diagnose

May 9, 2026

You have been treated for thrush. Again. The cream doesn’t work. The itch comes back. Something tears in the same spot, over and over. And nobody has said the two words that could change everything.

distressed lady after yearrs of pain, and endless thrush creams treating lichen sclerosus

So I’m going to say them now: lichen sclerosus.

Watch First: Lichen Sclerosus — The Vulval Condition That Takes Years to Diagnose

What Is Lichen Sclerosus?

Lichen sclerosus (LS) is a chronic inflammatory skin condition. It primarily affects the vulva — the outer part of a woman’s genitals — and the area around the anus. Occasionally it affects skin elsewhere on the body.

Before anything else, let’s clear up the most common misconceptions:

  • ✅ It is NOT contagious — you cannot pass it to a partner
  • ✅ It is NOT a sexually transmitted infection
  • ✅ It is NOT caused by anything you did wrong
  • ✅ It IS an autoimmune condition — your immune system mistakenly attacks the skin in that area
  • ✅ It IS treatable — and catching it early genuinely changes your outcome

It can affect women at any age — from young girls through to women post-menopause — but it is most commonly seen in post-menopausal women.

Why Does It Take So Long to Diagnose?

Research published in the British Journal of General Practice (November 2024) found that women with lichen sclerosus experience a mean diagnostic delay of up to 4.6 years — with many waiting far longer before receiving the correct answer.

BJGP 2024 — Barriers to Diagnosing Lichen Sclerosus

Years of itching. Years of tearing. And years of pain during sex. And then, years of being handed thrush cream.

The reason this happens is straightforward: the symptoms of LS overlap almost completely with more common conditions — thrush, eczema, contact dermatitis, postmenopausal dryness. A GP seeing vulval itching and inflammation will reasonably reach for the most likely diagnosis first. Antifungal cream is prescribed. It offers some relief. Then the symptoms return.

This cycle repeats — sometimes for years — because lichen sclerosus causes chronic, progressive, structural changes to the skin that thrush simply does not. Unless a clinician looks carefully at the texture and colour of the skin, LS can hide in plain sight.

This is why what you know matters. The seven signs below give you the language to go back to your GP and ask the right questions.

7 Signs Your Symptoms Could Be Lichen Sclerosus

Sign 1: A Persistent Itch That Is Different

The itch of lichen sclerosus is not the acute, sharp itch of a thrush infection. It is:

  • Persistent — it does not go away between episodes
  • Deeper — some women describe it as feeling underneath the skin, unreachable no matter how much they scratch
  • Worse at night — often waking women from sleep
  • Unresponsive to antifungal treatment — this is the critical flag

The reason it is worse at night is that there is active inflammation at skin level continuously stimulating nerves.

What to say to your GP: “I have treated this as thrush more than twice and it has never fully gone away.” That single sentence changes what happens next.

Sign 2: White or Pale Skin Changes

The skin of the vulva may develop white, pale, or ivory patches with a shiny or slightly crinkled appearance. The skin looks and feels thinner — almost tissue-paper-like.

You may not feel these changes. You may only notice them when you look in a mirror. Or your GP may spot them during an examination — which is exactly why a proper examination matters.

This is not cosmetic. It signals active disease. The skin is thinning and a kind of internal scarring is developing beneath the surface.

Not every pale patch equals lichen sclerosus — other conditions can cause similar changes. But all unexplained vulval skin changes deserve a proper assessment, not guesswork.

Sign 3: Skin That Splits and Tears

In LS, the skin loses its elasticity and becomes fragile. Small splits, cracks, or fissures develop — often at the posterior fourchette, the small area of skin at the back of the vaginal opening.

Women describe this as a sharp, stinging sensation in the same spot, over and over. Like a paper cut that heals and then reopens.

These tears can happen after sex, after exercise, or during normal daily movement.

Important: Using antifungal cream meant for thrush on LS-related skin tears can further irritate the tissue and delay healing. If recurring skin splitting in the same spot is not responding to standard creams — stop, and see your doctor.

Sign 4: Pain During Sex (Dyspareunia)

Dyspareunia — pain during sex — is one of the most emotionally significant features of lichen sclerosus and one of the most underreported.

Women describe:

  • Burning or tearing pain at penetration
  • A rawness after sex that persists for hours or even days
  • Progressive difficulty over time as the skin becomes less flexible

In more advanced LS, the inner labia can fuse together and the vaginal opening can narrow — making penetration increasingly painful. This is not inevitable. It is a consequence of late or absent treatment. With early diagnosis and the right treatment, these changes can be reversed or prevented entirely.

If you have given up on sex, avoided intimacy, or been told it is in your head — what you are experiencing is real, physical, and fixable.

Sign 5: Urinary Symptoms

This one surprises many women. When LS affects the area around the urethra, it can cause:

  • A split or misdirected urine stream
  • Burning when passing urine — not caused by infection
  • A sense of urgency, or difficulty getting urine to flow

These symptoms are frequently attributed to a urinary tract infection — leading to repeated courses of antibiotics that produce no lasting improvement.

The clinical flag: If you have been treated for recurrent UTIs but your urine cultures keep coming back negative — and you have other signs on this list — your GP needs to examine your vulval skin. That pattern, negative cultures alongside other LS signs, is one that gets missed repeatedly.

Sign 6: The Pattern of Misdiagnosis

This is not a symptom you can see in the mirror. But it may be the most important sign on this list.

The conditions most commonly confused with lichen sclerosus are:

Condition Confused With LSWhy It Looks SimilarKey Difference
Thrush (vulvovaginal candidiasis)Itching, redness, sorenessLS has white skin changes and skin thinning; thrush causes white discharge
Eczema / contact dermatitisItching, inflamed skinLS is structural and progressive; eczema responds to triggers and treatment
Postmenopausal drynessDryness, pain with sex, skin thinningBoth can coexist; LS is autoimmune, not purely hormonal
Urinary tract infectionUrgency, discomfort passing urineLS near the urethra; no bacteria in urine culture
PsoriasisPale plaques, skin changesLS has characteristic figure-of-eight distribution around vulva and anus

If any treatment offered has not made a lasting difference — ask your doctor directly: “Could this be lichen sclerosus?”

Sign 7: The Small Cancer Risk — Context You Need

Lichen sclerosus does carry a small increased risk of vulval squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) — a type of skin cancer. The lifetime risk is estimated at 3–5%.

Here is the context that matters:

  • The elevated risk is specifically linked to untreated or poorly controlled LS
  • Women who use their prescribed treatment regularly and attend annual follow-up have a substantially lower risk
  • Any new, persistent lump, ulcer, or area that bleeds on contact should be reported to your GP promptly

The cancer risk is a reason to take lichen sclerosus seriously — not a reason to panic. Treatment protects you.

📥 Download the free Vulval & Vaginal Health Diary — track your symptoms and take structured notes to your next GP appointment. →

guides.askawayhealth.org/vulval-vaginal-health

What to Say at Your GP Appointment

The biggest barrier to diagnosis is often not having the right words. Use this:

“I’ve been experiencing vulval itching for [X months/years]. I’ve been treated for thrush [X times] and it has never fully cleared. I’ve also noticed [white skin changes / skin splitting / pain during sex]. I’d like to be examined and considered for lichen sclerosus.”

If your GP is not examining you, you are within your rights to ask: “Could you take a look at the skin directly?”

Diagnosis is usually clinical — made by visual examination. A skin biopsy may be taken to confirm, particularly if the appearance is atypical or if there is any concern about malignant change.

Is There a Cure for Lichen Sclerosus?

There is currently no permanent cure — but this does not mean it cannot be managed well. Many women with LS live completely comfortable, active lives with the right treatment in place.

The standard first-line treatment is a high-potency topical corticosteroid — most commonly clobetasol propionate 0.05% ointment.

What Treatment Looks Like:

PhaseWhat Happens
Initial (weeks 1–12)Daily application of clobetasol propionate to the affected area, usually at night
Maintenance (long-term)Gradually reducing frequency under GP supervision — often 1–3 times per week
Skin protectionSoap substitute + regular emollient to protect fragile skin
Follow-upAt minimum annual review to check for skin changes or early signs of malignant change

Important: The treatment for lichen sclerosus is a long-term commitment. Stopping when symptoms improve often leads to relapse. The goal is control, not cure — and with good control, you can live completely normally.

Source:

NHS — Lichen Sclerosus


📺 Related: The most common vulval lumps and what they actually mean

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBaFKdkHa4E\

When to Seek Help — And How Urgently

SymptomActionTimeframe
White skin changes + persistent itch unresponsive to thrush treatmentSee GPWithin 1–2 weeks
Skin tearing or splitting repeatedly at the same siteSee GPWithin 1–2 weeks
Pain with sex that is new or worseningSee GPWithin 1–2 weeks
Recurrent UTI symptoms with negative urine culturesSee GPWithin 1–2 weeks
Narrowing of the vaginal openingSee GP — request vulval clinic referralWithin 2–4 weeks
New lump, ulcer, or raised area within a known LS patchSee GP urgentlyWithin 48–72 hours
Any area that bleeds when touchedSee GP urgentlyWithin 48–72 hours
Previously diagnosed LS patch that has changed in appearanceSee GPWithin 1 week

The Bottom Line

Lichen sclerosus is real, common, and entirely manageable — but only once it is found. The diagnostic delay is not inevitable. It closes every time a woman walks into her GP appointment armed with the right language and the confidence to ask for a proper examination. If your symptoms have never fully resolved, you are not overreacting — you are following a clinical pattern that deserves a clinical answer. Book the appointment. You deserve more than another prescription for thrush cream.


How long did it take to get your diagnosis? Share it below — your story might be the reason someone else finally gets answers. → Join the free AskAwayHealth community

Share this blog article

Leave a comment

Please fill in the field below to add a comment.

Want to know how your comment data is processed? Learn more

Access over 1000 videos, posts & our monthly newsletter.

Askawayhealth 2023 grant recipient from European Union Development Fund

Askawayhealth, 2023 Award Recipient

Our educational content meets the standards set by the NHS in their Standard for Creating Health Content guidance.

Askawayhealth aims to deliver reliable and evidence based women's health, family health and sexual health information in a way that is easily relatable and simple for everyone to access.