Skin lesions, tumours and cancers Flashcards

1
Q

Freckles/ ephilides are caused by patchy increase in ____1______ They are most common in ____2____ those with freckles and red hair have two _____3______

A

1) melanin pigmentation
2) fair skin and red heads
3) I mean pathologist claims defective but I am going to go with mutated copies of the MC1R gene. If you just have freckles you only have one MUTATED copy :)

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2
Q

What are actinic lentigines?

A

Age spots that occur in older people after chronic UV exposure they are due to an increase in melanin and basal melanocytes

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3
Q

___1___ of babies are born with congenital nave. Large lesions have to excised because __2____

A

1) 1-2%

2) they increase risk of melanoma by 10-15%

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4
Q

What allows the formation of simple naevi? How common are simple naevi? Do they have a low or high malignant potential?

A

During infancy the melanocytes: keratinocyte ratio breaks down at a number of cutaneous sites allowing the formation of simple naevi (moles). These are very common and the average person has 20-30. They have low malignant potential.

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5
Q

Halo naevi have a peripheral halo of _____1________ due to ____2_______

A

1- depigmentation

2- inflammatory regression and lymphocytes

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6
Q

Blue naevi are entirely __1____ and consist of ___2_____

A

1) dermal

2) pigment rich dendritic spindle cells

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7
Q

Describe spitz naevi

A

occurs in young children, large spindle and or epithelia cells, closely mimics melanoma. Difficult to diagnose as there is a malignant variation of this disease.

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8
Q

What do all dysplastic naevi show?

A

architectural atypia and cellular atypia

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9
Q

Actinic keratoses are common on ____1____ They appear as __2____ A small minority of lesions ___3____ They can be treated with ___4______

A

1) fair skinned individuals on sun exposed areas
2) rough, scaly, erythematous papule or patches and the surrounding skin usually shows signs on sun damage
3) undergo malignant transformation to SCC
4) cryotherapy, curettage or creams

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10
Q

Bowen’s disease is a indolent form of _____1____ which rarely progresses to ___2___ Lesions appears as ____3_____ resembling __4___ but lacking thick silvery scale

A

1) intraepidermal carcinoma in situ
2) which rarely progresses to SCC
3) slowly enlarging, well demarcated, scaly red patch or plaque
4) psoriasis

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11
Q

What is an inherited condition that increases risk of malignant melanoma?

A

Familial atypical multiple mole melanoma

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12
Q

What is the most serious skin cancer? Why?

A

Melanoma. Greatest potential to metastasise as melanocytes are naturally motile cells anyway.

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13
Q

Describe the ABCDE criteria for a suspicious looking mole

A
A= asymmetry of the mole
B= border irregularity
C= colour variation
D= diameter more than 6mm
E= elevation
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14
Q

What are the four types of melanoma?

A

Superficial spreading, lentigo maligna melanoma, nodular malignant melanoma, acral lentiginous melanoma.

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15
Q

Describe superficial spreading melanoma

A

Large, flat, irregularly pigmented lesion that grows laterally before vertical invasion. Most common type in fair skinned people.

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16
Q

Describe lentigo maligna melanoma

A

A patch of lentigo maligna (pigmented macular lesion on the face) that develops a papule or nodule which signals invasive melanoma.

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17
Q

Describe nodular melanoma

A

Most aggressive type. It presents as a rapidly growing pigmented nodule which bleeds or ulcerates. Invasive from the outset.

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18
Q

Describe acral lentiginous melanoma

A

Arises as pigmented lesions of the palm or sole or under the nail, and usually presents late. May not be related to sun exposure. This is the most common type of melanoma in black people.

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19
Q

What does melanoma prognosis largely relate to?

A

Breslow thickness and ulceration

20
Q

Define breslow thickness

A

The deepest part of the tumour from the granular layer in mm

21
Q

Breslow thickness less than 1mm 5yr survival=?

A

95-100%

22
Q

Breslow thickness more than 4mm 5yr survival=?

A

50%

23
Q

Ulceration in a melanoma is good or bad?

A

Bad- it’s a strong adverse indicator

24
Q

Describe the spread of melanoma

A

Melanoma spreads to local dermal lymphatics (satellite deposits), regional lymph nodes and blood spread to: skin/ soft tissue, heart, lungs, GI tract, liver and brain.

25
Q

Describe treatment of melanoma

A

Primary excision is done to give clear margins. In thicker tumours may do sentinel node biopsies and if positive will then do a regional lymphadenectomy. Treatment of advanced disease is difficult. Removal of regional lymph nodes, isolated limb perfusion, radiotherapy, immunotherapy and chemotherapy done but no real improvement. New targeted therapies have improved prognosis such as BRAF inhibitors, MEK inhibitors. Also CTLA4 antibody and PDI antibody.

26
Q

What is the most common malignant skin tumour?

A

Basal cell carcinoma

27
Q

Where is basal cell carcinoma thought to arise from?

A

Thought to arise from pluripotential cells in the basal epidermis or follicular structures

28
Q

Basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma are both caused by UV exposure what’s the difference?

A

BCC is thought to be caused by peak exposures (so like periods where your burn) whereas SCC is by chronic UV exposure so the result in cumulative.

29
Q

Who does BCC commonly arise in?

A

Fair, middle aged people with sun exposed skin.

30
Q

What are the three main subtypes of BCC?

A

Nodular
Superficial
Infiltrative/morpheic

31
Q

Describe nodular BCC

A

Typically appears as a shiny, pearly nodule with central ulceration

32
Q

Describe superficial BCC

A

BCC that spreads superficially as opposed to vertically

33
Q

Describe infiltrative/ morpheic BCC

A

Most important type and may infiltrate tissues widely. Prominent desmoplastic fibrous stroma. Margins are poorly defined and resection can be difficult as sometimes there is spread along nerves.

34
Q

Describe treatment of BCC

A

In most cases treatment of choice is a wide excision with histology to ensure clear and adequate tumour margins. BCCs rarely ever metastasise so main reason to remove is that they are locally invasive. For superficial BCCs can treat with cryotherapy, phototherapy or topical imiquimod. Vismodegib is a new oral therapy for inoperable BCCs that inhibits hedgehog signalling.

35
Q

What mutations are thought to cause BCC and can be a target for drugs?

A

Mutations in PTCH1, the human homolog of the Patched gene that regulates hedgehog intracellular signalling pathway

36
Q

What does squamous cell carcinoma arise from

A

Epidermal squamous epithelium

37
Q

Presentation of squamous cell carcinoma?

A

Most commonly presents as a hyperkeratotic nodule or area of induration. In more advanced stages, ulceration and destruction of underlying tissues may be present. SCC can also arise in pre-existing solar keratoses or Bowen’s disease and can also complicate areas of chronic inflammation.

38
Q

Treatment of squamous cell carcinoma?

A

Complete surgical excision with a minimal margin of 5mm. Radiotherapy is also used.

39
Q

Seborrhoeic keratosis is a ______1___________ common on __2_____ Eruptive appearance of many lesions may indicate _______

A

1) benign proliferation of epidermal keratinocytes
2) ageing skin on face and trunk
3) malignancy

40
Q

Dermatofibromas are _______1__________ often surrounded by a peripheral ring of _____2_____ they are usually found on ___3_____ Excision only needed if ____4_____

A

1- pink beige firm dermal nodules
2- hyperpigmentation
3- leg in females
4- symptomatic or uncertainty of diagnosis

41
Q

What is dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans?

A

Rare type of soft tissue cancer that develops in the deep layers of the skin

42
Q

What are angiomas?

A

benign tumours derived from vascular cells

43
Q

What is angiosarcoma? How may it appear?

A

Cancer that forms in the lining of blood and lymph vessels. Often affects the skin and may appear as a bruise like lesion that spreads over time.

44
Q

What type of cancer is derived from mechanoreceptors in the epidermis and is rare and highly aggressive?

A

Merkel cell cancer

45
Q

How can you tell the difference between Bowens and superficial BCC?

A

Bowens tends to be slightly more scaly- go on site swell, bowens will always be sun exposed area whereas superficial BCC may not