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SKIN CANCER Dr. D. Czarnecki MD MBBS Skin Cancer • Skin cancer is a major health problem in Australia • The most common skin cancer is the Basal Cell Carcinoma (BCC) • The next most common is the Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) • The least common is the Melanoma (MM) • BCC and SCC are often grouped together as nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) • Skin cancer dose not kill many Australians but treating cancers causes considerable morbidity. Skin Cancer • Not all races have an equal risk of developing skin cancer • Skin cancers overwhelmingly develop in white people • The following slide has the incidences of NMSC in different races in different parts of the world • The highest incidence found was in white Australian men living in tropical Queensland • The incidence in coloured people was lower, even when they lived in the tropics. NMSC - incidence Tropical Australia (men only) 3090 per 100,000 Hawaii (white- both sexes) Hawaii (Japanese) 927 Hawaii (Filipino) Arabian Peninsula South Africa (Blacks) Californian Chinese Japan 14 2 <1 1 1 55 Skin Cancer • A BCC – nodular type. Most of these occur on the head. • BCCs slowly grow • BCCs rarely metastasize – about 1 in 100,000 • It is often difficult to tell BCCs from SCCs on clinical grounds Skin Cancer • A BCC – superficial type • This is now the most common type of BCC and most occur on the back • It is pink, well demarcated, and slightly scaly • There is a small area of ulceration A morphoeic BCC – it looks like marble The red area is the biopsy site The BCC grows between collagen bundles hence the indistinct margin BCC • Treatment of BCCs: • Surgery has the lowest recurrence rate (5-8%) • Radiotherapy has a 12% recurrent rate • Imiquimod fails in 20-40% (higher failure rate in thicker tumours) • Photodynamic therapy fails in 40% after 4 years of follow up • Cryotherapy has a high failure rate and should not be used unless a thermocouple is used (to measure skin temperature at a set depth) Skin Cancer • An SCC on the forehead • SCCs are most often found on the head or hands • SCCs metastasize in about 5% of cases • The regional lymph node is the most common site of metastasis SCC • The average age for an SCC to develop in Melbourne is 71. This means that many patients die of other causes before metastases are obvious. • The Metastatic rate could be higher. • The risk factors for metastasis are Thickness > 4 mm male sex located on the ear a recurrent SCC perineural spread is present the patient is immunosuppressed SCC • An SCC on the nose • There are metastases in the submental lymph nodes • The patient had chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and died shortly after of the leukaemia metastases SCC • A recurrent SCC in front of the ear. • The initial pathology report stated that it was incompletely excised • A wider, deeper excision is mandatory Skin Cancer • A safety margin is needed • A 4 mm margin of normal looking tissue is recommended for BCCs (not morphoeic) and SCCs • A 4 mm margin will give a 95% chance of removing the tumour • For morphoeic BCCs a 10 mm margin is recommended Skin Cancer • You must review the patient • Overall – 2/3rds will develop a new skin cancer within 5 years • The risk is higher the greater the number of skin cancers a patient has had removed • Patients with skin cancer have an increased risk of developing non-Hodgkins lymphoma • Regular review enables the doctor examine for cancers and to re- inforce the message about protection from sunburn. You must review your patients A recurrent skin cancer Melanoma • Melanomas are the least common skin cancers. There were fewer than 10,000 invasive melanomas registered in Australia in 2003. There were about 40% more melanomas-in-situ. In 2003 there were about 14,000 melanomas removed from Australians • About 1000 Australians die each year of melanoma. This is fewer than commit suicide or die in car accidents. The number of invasive melanomas excised from Australians – AIHW (www.aihw.gov.au) Melanoma • Not all races are at risk of melanoma. The disease is overwhelmingly one of white people. • The main risk factors for a melanoma are (in decreasing order of importance: A previous melanoma A previous BCC or SCC More than 150 moles A skin that sun burns easily and tans poorly A first degree relative with a melanoma Immunosuppression The incidence of melanoma in different countries (cases per 100,000) Victoria 37.00 India 0.1 Hong Kong 0.1 China 0.1 Arabian Peninsula 0.1 Japan 0.4 Melanoma • Had a melanoma? – 10% get another • A family history (FH) increases the risk • 1 first degree relative – doubles the risk • 2 first degree relatives – 5 times the risk • 3 first degree relatives – 35 to 70 times the risk • Had a BCC or SCC? – greater risk than a +ve FH • • x 8 for men x 4 for women Melanoma • A typical melanoma • It is asymmetrical • The A B of melanoma: • A – asymmetry • B – biopsy asymmetrical pigmented lesions Melanoma • When you see a pigmented lesion • Draw a line down the middle • If one half does not look like the other half • TAKE A BIOPSY It is asymmetrical Melanoma • Taking a punch biopsy or a shave biopsy • Will not increase the risk of metastases • Studies have found no risk if such a biopsy is taken and the definitive surgery is carried out within two weeks • Punch or shave biopsies are not encouraged because thickness is the main prognostic factor and a biopsy may miss the thickest area • However, if unsure, and you do not wish to excise the lesion, take a biopsy Melanoma • This melanoma is thick – at the inferior end • It is ulcerated • Thickness and ulceration are the two most important prognostic factors Melanoma • If you think the lesion is a melanoma – excise it • Guides lines • Excise with a 2 mm margin, await the pathology report, and if it is a melanoma, carry out a wider excision • Margins • Melanoma-in-situ – 5 mm margin • Melanoma < 1 mm thick – 1 cm margin • Melanoma > 1 mm thick – 2 cms margin Melanoma • Prognostic factors (a worse prognosis) • Thickness • Ulceration • Male sex • Site – ear, palms, soles • Old age • Level IV in thin melanomas Melanoma • This melanoma developed on the toe. The patient had many naevi and had had a BCC. • Melanomas on the feet are uncommon. • You need to examine the entire body. Melanoma Symmetrical A blue naevus Asymmetrical A thin melanoma Carefully look the shape and colouring of each half are different Melanoma Symmetrical Pear shaped Asymmetrical – melanoma next to a seborrhoeic keratosis Growing into the seborrhoeic keratosis Melanoma Asymmetrical Asymmetrical