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Oral condyloma acuminatum in a 75-year-old geriatric patient. Condyloma acuminatum (CA) is a human papillomavirus-induced sexually transmitted disease which is characterised by epithelial proliferation in the genital region, perianal region, oral cavity and larynx. It was first reported by Knapp and Uohara in 1967. The disease is more common in children and teenagers and appears as solitary or multiple, pinkish, sessile papules or plaques with pebbled surface or as pedunculated papillary lesions. Oral lesions commonly affect the lips, floor of the mouth, lateral and ventral surfaces of tongue, buccal mucosa, soft palate and rarely gingiva. The present report deals with a case of CA affecting a 75-year-old male patient with emphasis on clinical presentation, histological features and importance of PCR for establishment of definitive diagnosis. This case is unique because CA is extremely rare in geriatric age group.