Malignant Skin Lesions


Basal Cell Carcinoma

General

  • 1.

    Most common skin malignancy

  • 2.

    Originates from epidermis: basal epithelial cells and hair follicles

  • 3.

    Clinical presentation

    • a.

      Waxy or cream-colored

    • b.

      Classically described with pearly, rolled borders

    • c.

      Central ulceration common; slow, indolent growth

    • d.

      70% occur on face

    • e.

      Local destruction; rarely metastatic disease

  • 4.

    Types

    • a.

      Nodular—classic type

    • b.

      Superficial—slow growing, scaly, pink plaque

    • c.

      Sclerosing/morpheaform—rarest form (5%–10%), resembles scar, most aggressive

  • 5.

    Risk factors

    • a.

      Ultraviolet light, radiation therapy (XRT), immunosuppression, arsenic

    • b.

      Genetic predisposition: basal-nevus syndrome (PTCH-1), xeroderma pigmentosa (XP), other rare conditions

Diagnosis

  • 1.

    Punch biopsy

  • 2.

    Excisional biopsy for smaller lesions

Treatment

  • 1.

    Surgical excision with 3–5-mm margins ideal

  • 2.

    Electrodissection and curettage/photodynamic therapy (PDT)/laser ablation for smaller lesions/premalignant lesions

  • 3.

    Mohs micrographic surgery

    • a.

      For cosmetically sensitive areas, high-risk or recurrent lesions

    • b.

      Serial excision of tumor with immediate evaluation of frozen sections until normal tissue margins obtained

  • 4.

    Radiation therapy

  • 5.

    Topical treatment with 5-fluorouracil (5FU)/imiquimod cream for multiple lesions, low-risk superficial lesions

  • 6.

    Systemic treatment for rare metastasis or locally advanced disease not amenable to surgery or radiation: Smoothened (SMO) inhibitors

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

General

  • 1.

    Second-most common skin malignancy

  • 2.

    Squamous cell carcinoma greater than 2 cm or if poorly differentiated has an increased likelihood of metastasis compared with basal cell carcinoma of similar size

  • 3.

    Associated with ultraviolet exposure, chronic scars, and irradiated skin, immunosuppression, genetic disorders (e.g., XP)

  • 4.

    Precursor is actinic keratosis majority of time

  • 5.

    Clinical presentation

    • a.

      Arises in sun-exposed areas (i.e., face, extremities)

    • b.

      Erythematous, scaly plaque, ulcerated mass or nodule

  • 6.

    Bowen disease

    • a.

      Squamous cell carcinoma in situ

    • b.

      Five percent develop into invasive squamous cell carcinoma

  • 7.

    Marjolin ulcer—squamous cell carcinoma arising in old burn scar

  • 8.

    Erythroplasia of Queyrat—in situ squamous cell carcinoma of penis

You're Reading a Preview

Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles

Become membership

If you are a member. Log in here