Nonmelanocytic Skin & Soft Tissue Tumors: A Student's Guide
Cutaneous malignant tumors are cancers that arise from the skin’s epithelial or adnexal structures. They vary widely in behavior from locally destructive lesions to aggressive cancers with significant metastatic potential. This guide focuses on the clinical features, typical presentations, and practical management principles of the principal cutaneous malignant tumors described in the source text.
Definition: Cutaneous malignant tumors are neoplasms originating from epidermal, appendageal, or mesenchymal components of the skin that demonstrate invasive growth and potential for local destruction or distant spread.
Definition: Squamous cell carcinoma is a malignant tumor of keratinocytes that frequently arises in sun-damaged or chronically inflamed skin and may ulcerate and invade locally.
Definition: Basal cell carcinoma is a locally invasive malignant tumor originating from basal keratinocytes, characterized by slow growth and rare metastasis but potential for significant local tissue destruction.
Table: Histologic subtypes of BCC and key features
| Subtype | Typical behavior / notes |
|---|---|
| Multifocal superficial BCC | Multiple superficial patches, may be amenable to topical therapy or superficial ablation |
| Nodular BCC | Classic pearly nodule, common on face |
| Infiltrating / sclerosing BCC | More aggressive, ill-defined margins |
| Fibroepithelial BCC | Often on trunk, pedunculated |
| Basosquamous carcinoma | Shows squamous differentiation; may behave more aggressively |
| Keratotic / Pigmented / Micronodular | Variants with clinical differences; pigment or keratinization may be present |
These arise from hair follicles, sebaceous glands, sweat glands, or related adnexal structures.
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Klíčová slova: Skin and Soft Tissue Tumors - Clinical and Pathology, Diagnosis and imaging, Oncologic surgery and staging, Skin and Soft Tissue Tumors - Classification and Treatment, Cutaneous malignant tumors, Benign skin tumors — cutaneous & soft-tissue, Benign skin tumors — adnexal lesions, Pigmented lesions, Soft tissue sarcomas, Vascular anomalies
Klíčové pojmy: Biopsy any nonhealing, indurated, or ulcerated skin lesion promptly, SCC often arises in chronically damaged or scarred skin and may produce a foul odor, BCC is the most common skin cancer and is locally destructive but rarely metastasizes, Mohs micrographic surgery is preferred for margin control in cosmetically/ functionally important sites and for DFSP, EMPD mimics eczema; mapping biopsy helps define surgical margins, Merkel cell carcinoma is aggressive, often linked to polyomavirus, and requires wide excision plus nodal evaluation, DFSP frequently harbors COL1A1–PDGFB fusion and needs wide excision to prevent recurrence, Sebaceous and sweat gland carcinomas require wide excision; consider lymph node dissection for advanced disease, Trichilemmal carcinomas arise from outer root sheath and need wide excision, Differentiate SCC from BCC because SCC has higher metastatic risk, Use adjuvant radiotherapy or chemotherapy for nodal or distant metastases when indicated, Atypical fibroxanthoma is a superficial variant of MFH with generally less aggressive behavior