MS - Path (Skin cancer) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 kinds of skin cancer?

A

(1) Basal cell carcinoma (2) Squamous cell carcinoma (3) Melanoma

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2
Q

What is the most common skin cancer?

A

Basal cell carcinoma

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3
Q

In what areas of the body is basal cell carcinoma found?

A

Found in sun-exposed areas of body

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4
Q

What is the invasion/metastasis potential of basal cell carcinoma?

A

Locally invasive, but almost never metastasizes

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5
Q

Describe the classic physical appearance of basal cell carcinoma. Include 2 other variants of appearance.

A

Pink, pearly nodules, commonly with telangiectasias, rolled borders, and central crusting or ulceration. BCCs also appear as nonhealing ulcers with infiltrating growth or as a scaling plaque (superficial BCC).

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6
Q

What is a key histologic finding of basal cell carcinoma?

A

Basal cell tumors have “palisading” nuclei

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7
Q

What is the second most common skin cancer?

A

Squamous cell carcinoma

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8
Q

What are 3 causes/conditions to associated with squamous cell carcinoma?

A

Associated with excessive exposure to sunlight, immunosuppression, and occasionally arsenic exposure

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9
Q

What are 4 body parts where squamous cell carcinoma commonly appears?

A

Commonly appears on face, lower lip, ears, and hands

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10
Q

What is the potential for invasion/metastasis of squamous cell carcinoma?

A

Locally invasive, but may spread to lymph nodes and will rarely metastasize

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11
Q

What is the classic physical appearance of squamous cell carcinoma? What is its classic finding on histology?

A

Ulcerative red lesions with frequent scale. Histopathology: keratin “pearls”

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12
Q

With what other ailment is squamous cell carcinoma associated?

A

Associated with chronic draining sinuses

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13
Q

What are 2 precursors/variants to squamous cell carcinoma?

A

(1) Actinic keratosis (2) Keratoacanthoma

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14
Q

What defines Actinic keratosis? To which skin cancer is it related?

A

A scaly plaque, is a precursor to squamous cell carcinoma

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15
Q

What defines Keratoacanthoma? To which skin cancer is it related?

A

A variant (of squamous cell carcinoma) that grows rapidly (4-6 weeks) and may regress spontaneously over months

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16
Q

What is a common skin tumor with significant risk for metastasis?

A

Melanoma

17
Q

What is a tumor marker for melanoma?

A

S-100 tumor marker

18
Q

With what exposure is melanoma associated? What patient population is at increased risk?

A

Associated with sunlight exposure; fair-skinned persons at increased risk

19
Q

What correlates with risk of metastasis of melanoma?

A

Depth of tumor correlates with risk of metastasis

20
Q

What are the key criteria to look for in distinguishing melanoma?

A

Look for the ABCDEs: Asymmetry, Border irregularity, Color variation, Diameter > 6 mm, and Evolution over time

21
Q

At least how many types of melanoma are there? What are they?

A

At least 4 different types of melanoma. (1) Superficial spreading (2) Nodular (3) lentingo maligna melanoma (4) acrolentiginous melanoma

22
Q

What mutation often drives melanoma?

A

Often driven by activating mutation in BRAF kinase

23
Q

What is the primary treatment for melanoma? What is another possible treatment, for what type of melanoma, and in what patient population?

A

Primary treatment is excision with appropriately wide margins. Metastatic or unresectable melanoma in patients with BRAF V600E mutation may benefit from vemurafenib, a BRAF kinase inhibitor