Skin Cancer Flashcards
Melanoma - what is the immediate and subsequent management?
Immediate: urgent excisional Bx w 2mm margin
(consider partial Bx [shave or incisional] only in difficult sites eg. nose, ear, acral, nail)
Subsequent: wide local excision (margins based on Breslow thickness) +/- sentinel lymph node biopsy +/- systemic therapy
Melanoma - name 10 risk factors
Male
Increasing age
PHx melanoma or NMSC / keratinocyte cancer
Multiple (>5) atypical naevi
Multiple common naevi (>100 or >11 on arm)
FHx melanoma
Fair skin that burns easily
High levels of sun exposure / skin damage
Blistering sunburn in youth
Immune suppression
Melanoma acronym (inc. nodular melanoma)
A - Asymmetry (colour, shape, pattern)
B - Border irregularity
C - Colour variation
D - Diameter >6mm
E - Evolving over time (size, shape, surface, colour, Sx eg. itch, bleeding)
For nodular melanoma
E - Elevated (small, round, raised lump that is black, brown, pink or red)
F - Firm to touch
G - Growing progressively for >1m
Melanoma - wide local excision margins based on Breslow thickness (vertical depth) of:
- Melanoma in situ
- <1mm dermal infiltration
- 1-2mm dermal infiltration
- 2-4mm dermal infiltration
- >4mm dermal infiltration
- Melanoma in situ: 5-10mm
- <1mm dermal infiltration: 1cm
- 1-2mm dermal infiltration: 1-2cm
- 2-4mm dermal infiltration: 1-2cm
- > 4mm dermal infiltration: 2cm
Name 5 melanoma dermoscopy features
Asymmetric pigmentation
Blue-white veil
Multiple brown dots
Pseudopods
Radial streaming
What are basal cell carcinoma key features?
Most common and least dangerous skin Ca
Slow growing, rarely metastasises
Non-tender
Basal cell carcinoma - name the 3 sub-types
Nodular = pearly raised edge w surface telangiectasia +/- central ulceration
Superficial = erythematous scaly patch (DDx Bowen’s disease, psoriasis, eczema, tinea)
Morphoeic = scar-like w poorly defined margin
What are squamous cell carcinoma key features?
Second most common skin Ca
Grows over months, may metastasise
Tender
Pre-cursor = solar/actinic keratoses
Squamous cell carcinoma - name the ‘3’ sub-types
Classic = irregular nodule or erythematous plaque, frequently ulcerates
Bowen’s disease (SCC in situ) = slowly expanding irregular scaly plaque, usually red but sometimes pigmented (DDx superficial BCC, psoriasis, eczema, tinea)
+/- Keratocanthomas = rapidly growing lesion, usually with a smooth outer dome and central kertain core. BENIGN but clinically indistinguishable from SCC -> require excision
Name 3 treatment options for SUPERFICIAL basal cell carcinoma
Cryotherapy (low-risk sites)
Curettage and cautery (trunk and proximal limbs)
Topical Imiquimod 5% cream nightly on 5 consecutive days for 6 weeks
DO NOT excise as first-line option
Name 4 treatment options for Bowen’s disease / SCC in situ
Cryotherapy
Curettage and cautery
SURGICAL EXCISION
Topical Fluorourcil 5% cream daily or BD for 2-4 weeks