Sclerodermiform basal cell carcinoma
Last Updated: 2023-07-07
Author(s): Anzengruber F., Navarini A.
ICD11: -
Keloid basal cell carcinoma, fibrosing basal cell carcinoma, morpheaant basal cell carcinoma, morpheiform basal cell carcinoma, sclerosing basal cell carcinoma.
Clinically "scarring" aspect, with a more pronounced therapeutic approach usually recommended.
- Atrophic, slightly raised, scarred, partly keloid, rarely ulcerating, yellowish, waxy or ivory-coloured, indistinctly demarcated, dermal plaque with telangiectasia. One sees an increased tendency to infiltrate deep structures.
- Anamnesis
- Clinic
- Biopsy
Particularly the nose, forehead or cheeks.
A connective tissue, fibromatous reaction surrounds the tumour cell clusters. Unlike other forms of BCC, the typical palisading is mostly absent.
- ↑ Risk of recurrence
|
Therapy of 1st choice according to Lebwohl |
Evidence level |
|
Curettage and electrodesiccation |
B |
|
Surgical excision |
B |
|
Moh's surgery (micrographically controlled) |
B |
|
Cryotherapy |
B |
|
Therapy of the 2nd choice after Lebwohl |
|
|
Radiation therapy |
B |
|
Therapy of the 3rd choice according to Lebwohl |
|
|
Interferon intralesional |
B |
|
Retinoids |
D |
|
Imiquimod |
A |
|
Photodynamic therapy |
A |
|
5-Fluorouracil |
A |
|
CO² laser |
D |
|
PEG-interleukin 2 |
D |
|
NSAIDs |
D |
|
Ingenol mebutate |
D |
|
Vismodegib |
A |
|
Intralesional interleukin application |
D |
|
Systemic chemotherapy |
D |
Operative therapy
- Excision
|
BCC Ø < 2 cm |
Infiltrative BCC |
||||
|
Safety distance |
3 mm |
4-5 mm |
3 mm |
5 mm |
13-15 mm |
|
Likelihood of tumour remnants remaining |
15% |
5% |
34% |
18% |
5% |
Source: Hauschild, A. (2016). Long version of the guideline "Basal cell carcinoma of the skin". Awmf.org. Retrieved 30 May 2016, from http://www.awmf.org/leitlinien/detail/ll/032-021.html
- Curettage with/without electrodesiccation
Experimental therapies
- Intralesional application of Dz13, a DNAzyme that targets JUN mRNA
- Itraconazole has successfully disrupted the hedgehog signalling pathway in single cases.
- Hedgehog inhibitor (vismodegib)
- In metastatic basal cell carcinoma, its use is indicated
- Radiation therapy
- If surgical (re)excision is not possible
- Contraindicated: in Gorlin syndrome
- Radiation therapy alone: 84-96% remission
- Single doses between 2.0 and 3.0 Gy performed
- Total doses of 60 to 70 Gy
- Patients with basal cell carcinoma syndrome (Gorlin-Goltz) should not be treated with ionising radiation
- Cure rate: approx. 80-84% (for superficial basal cell carcinoma)
- 5-Fluorouracil (5% in cream), applied topically daily for four to six weeks
- Disadvantage: no control whether basal cell carcinoma has been completely removed
- Cure rate: approx. 81% (for superficial basaliomas)
- Cure rates: 72-100%
- Imiquimod cream 5% daily 5x/week for a total of 6 weeks.
- Useful in superficial and in Gorlin syndrome.
- Especially for superficial basal cell carcinoma.
- Aesthetic results are worse.
- Cure rates: 4-17%
- Laser therapy
- Photodynamic therapy
- Recurrence rate: 3-19%
- Cryotherapy
- The gold standard of basal cell carcinoma therapy
- Especially infiltrative growing and sclerodermiform basal cell carcinomas should be surgically excised.
- In the case of incomplete resection, re-excision should be performed except in well justified cases.
- Cure rate depends on tumour diameter, histological type and safety margin.
- Clark CM, Furniss M, Mackay-Wiggan JM. Basal cell carcinoma: an evidence-based treatment update. Am J Clin Dermatol 2014;15:197-216.
- Kwasniak LA, Garcia-Zuazaga J. Basal cell carcinoma: evidence-based medicine and review of treatment modalities. Int J Dermatol 2011;50:645-58.
- Hauschild, A. (2016). Langfassung der Leitlinie "Basalzellkarzinom der Haut". Awmf.org. Retrieved 30 May 2016, from http://www.awmf.org/leitlinien/detail/ll/032-021.html
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