Malignant Tumors of the Skin (complete) Flashcards
What are the common types of skin cancer?
- BCC
- SCC
- Melanoma
What is the incidence of skin cancer in the US?
2 million diagnosed annually
What are the risk factors for non-melanoma skin cancers?
- Occurs more frequently in fair skinned ppl
- High UV exposure
- Also after ionizing radiation, arsenic or polycyclic hydrocarbon exposure
What are the risk factors for melanoma skin cancers?
- Fair skin
- Excessive skin exposure
- Immunosuppression
- MM in first degree relative
- Whites
- Large congenital nevus (birthmark)
- Sporadic dysplastic nevus syndrome
- FAMMM
What is a common precursor to SCC? What are tx’s?
Actinic keratosis
- it’s a precancer
Tx:
- Liquid nitrogen (cryosurgery)
- Chemo creams
- Immune stimulating creams
What are the common mutations leading to BCC?
patch1 mutation
- Loss of function
- Normally blocks smoothened (SMO), a transmembrane protein
What are the chemotherapeutic interventions used to treat BCC?
Vismodegib
- an inhibitor of SMO
What are the common mutations leading to melanoma?
BRAF mutation
- Increases transcription of genes => increases growth and proliferation
What are the chemotherapeutic interventions used to treat melanoma?
Vemurafinib
- Prevents increased transcription of genes that affect growth and proliferation
Describe Breslow depth
- Measures thickness from top to bottom of mass
- Number 1 indicator of prognosis
- Thicker melanoma => worse prognosis
Describe Clark levels
- Describes how far a melanoma has penetrated into skin, as opposed to thickness
- Looks more at layers of skin
- Not a true indicator of prognosis
I: Epidermis II: Papillary dermis III: Mid-dermis IV: Reticular dermis V: SubQ fat
What are the methods of skin cancer prevention?
- Wear sunscreen
- Wear sunglasses
- Get to new genes
What are the risk factors for skin cancer in transplant patients?
- Age, skin type, UV exposure
- Genetic factors
- HPV
- Level of immunosuppression (CD4 count, medications)
- Type of transplant
What are the ABCDE guidelines for malignant melanoma?
A: asymmetry B: border irregularity C: color variation D: Diameter >6mm E: Evolution (has it changed?)
What is Kaposi’s Sarcoma
- Endothelial malignancy
- Triggered by HHV-8
- Slowly progressive
- 0.05 in 100K pop’n
Three types:
1) Classic: in E. European, Mediterranean men, legs
2) Lymphadenopathic: equatorial Africa, young men, rapidly fatal
3) AIDS-associated: declining w/ anti-retroviral therapy against HIV