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SKIN CANCER

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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 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SKIN CANCER


1
SKIN CANCER
  • Dr. D. Czarnecki MD MBBS

2
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
    non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC)
  • Skin cancer dose not kill many Australians but
    treating cancers causes considerable morbidity.

3
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.

4
NMSC - incidence
5
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

6
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

7
A morphoeic BCC it looks like marble
The red area is the biopsy site
The BCC grows between collagen bundles hence the
indistinct margin
8
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)

9
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

10
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 gt 4 mm
  • male sex
  • located on the ear
  • a recurrent SCC
  • perineural spread is present
  • the patient is immunosuppressed

11
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
12
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

13
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

14
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.

15
You must review your patients
A recurrent skin cancer
16
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.

17
The number of invasive melanomas excised from
Australians AIHW (www.aihw.gov.au)
18
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

19
The incidence of melanoma in different countries
(cases per 100,000)
20
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

21
Melanoma
  • A typical melanoma
  • It is asymmetrical
  • The A B of melanoma
  • A asymmetry
  • B biopsy asymmetrical pigmented lesions

22
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
23
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

24
Melanoma
  • This melanoma is thick at the inferior end
  • It is ulcerated
  • Thickness and ulceration are the two most
    important prognostic factors

25
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 lt 1 mm thick 1 cm margin
  • Melanoma gt 1 mm thick 2 cms margin

26
Melanoma
  • Prognostic factors (a worse prognosis)
  • Thickness
  • Ulceration
  • Male sex
  • Site ear, palms, soles
  • Old age
  • Level IV in thin melanomas

27
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.

28
Melanoma
Asymmetrical
A thin melanoma Carefully look the shape and
colouring of each half are different
Symmetrical A blue naevus
29
Melanoma
Asymmetrical melanoma next to a seborrhoeic
keratosis Growing into the seborrhoeic keratosis
Symmetrical Pear shaped
30
Melanoma
Asymmetrical
Asymmetrical
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