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level: Level 1 of Chapter 18 : Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Questions and Answers List

level questions: Level 1 of Chapter 18 : Squamous Cell Carcinoma

QuestionAnswer
What is squamous cell carcinoma cutaneous?• Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is an invasive malignant neoplasm of epidermal keratinocytes showing squamous phenotypic differentiation • Bowen disease (BD) is a squamous cell carcinoma in situ (SSCIS) with full-epidermal thickness dysplasia that has the potential for significant lateral spread before invasion
What are major sites of squamous cell carcinoma?• The majority (70%) of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) occurs on the head and neck, with an additional 15% found on the upper extremities • Tumors of sun-protected skin are more prevalent in black persons • These tumors carry a higher mortality risk, possibly resulting from delayed diagnosis • Bowen disease has a similar distribution, but this condition is also seen in subungual, periungual, palmar, genital, and perianal locations. Erythroplasia of Queyrat refers to Bowen disease on the glans penis
How is clinical presentation of squamous cell carcinoma?• SCC presents as a raised, firm, skin-colored or pink, often keratotic papule or plaque on a background of severely sundamaged skin, with: • mottled pigmentary alteration • telangiectasias • the presence of multiple actinic keratoses • Bowen disease presents as a slow-growing, irregular, sharply circumscribed, erythematous, velvety, or scaly plaque on sun-exposed or sun-protected skin • Marjolin ulcers should be considered in any chronic ulcer that fails to heal or which demonstrates a changing appearance
What is the differential for cutaneous small cell carcinoma?• Atypical Fibroxanthoma • Epithelioid Angiosarcoma • Keratoacanthoma • Merkel Cell Carcinoma • Metastatic Hepatic Carcinoma • Paget Disease • Sebaceous Carcinoma • Spindle Cell Melanoma
How is histopathology of small cell carcinoma?• full-thickness epidermal replacement by crowded keratinocytes that demonstrate disordered dyspolarity, loss of maturation, and nuclear pleomorphism with hyperchromasia • Apoptotic or dyskeratotic cells as well as typical and atypical mitosis are present at all levels of the epidermis, as seen in the following image • Variable loss of the granular layer with surface parakeratosis • Involvement of hair follicles is common
How is immunohistochemistry for small cell carcninoma?• The combination of HMWK (CK34βE1) and p63 positivity was found to be the strongest identifying phenotype of SCC in its multiple variants
How is metastasis for small cell carcinoma?• Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) metastases are usually discovered 1-2 years after diagnosis • Primary tumors spread along fascial planes and nerves, as well as through lymphatics and blood vessels • Ipsilateral regional nodes (submental, submandibular, and parotid) are the most common metastasis recipients with a rate of 80% • Distant metastases occur in 14.8% of metastatic squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and most commonly involve the lungs, liver, brain, skin, or bone • Bowen disease invades the dermis in 3-4% of cases, with a higher rate of 10-14% in anogenital locations
How is tx of small cell carcinoma?• Surgical excision • Moh’s surgery • Cryosurgery • Chemotherapy (cisplatine) • Radiotherapy