Actinic Keratosis (AK)

Last Updated: 2025-10-10

Author(s): Anzengruber F., Navarini A.

ICD11: EK90.0

Keratinocytic intraepidermal neoplasia (KIN), solar keratosis, senile keratosis, keratoma senile, precancerous keratosis, in situ squamous cell carcinoma (SCC in situ).

UV-induced intraepidermal keratinocytic dysplasia. Increasingly recognized by dermatopathological societies (e.g., WHO, EADV) as early SCC in situ, especially high-grade (KIN II–III) lesions.

  • Most common premalignant lesion in sun-exposed skin.
  • Prevalence in Europe: ~15 % in men, ~6 % in women; >70 years: ~34 % in men, ~18 % in women.
  • Particularly frequent in outdoor workers and immunosuppressed persons.
  • Often occurs as part of field cancerization.
     

Histologic grading (Röwert Huber):

  • KIN I: basal layer atypia
  • KIN II: atypia in lower 2/3 of epidermis
  • KIN III: full-thickness atypia = SCC in situ
  • International guideline bodies now often reclassify AKs, especially KIN II–III, as SCC in situ. 
  • Olsen grading is considered clinically less relevant.

 

Clinical Variants

  • Classical erythematous AK
  • Hypertrophic/hyperkeratotic AK
  • Atrophic or bowenoid AK
  • Pigmented, lichenoid variants and actinic cheilitis
     
  • Cumulative UVB exposure → TP53, NOTCH1, and other mutations, causing keratinocyte dysplasia.
  • Risk factors: fair skin, immunosuppression (100–250 fold risk in transplant recipients), xeroderma pigmentosum, possible cofactor role of HPV.
  • Inflammatory microenvironment and field cancerization contribute to lesion progression and cluster formation.
  • Sharply marginated, scaly erythematous macule/papule/plaque
  • Texture: rough (“sandpaper”)
  • Usually asymptomatic; sometimes mild pruritus or burning
  • Common sites: forehead, scalp (esp. bald areas), ears, nose, lips, dorsal hands, forearms
  • Cutaneous horn (cornu cutaneum) in hypertrophic variants, with elevated malignant risk
  • Clinical inspection and palpation are essential
  • Dermoscopy: “strawberry pattern” (red pseudo-network with white scale)
  • Biopsy if lesions are hypertrophic, tender, or persist: to exclude invasive SCC
  • Histology: parakeratosis, keratinocyte atypia, solar elastosis, loss of normal epidermal architecture

Sun-exposed regions: face, bald scalp, ears, neckline, lips, dorsal hands, forearms.

Chronic sun exposure, outdoor work, history of sunburns, fair skin. Transplant patients typically have multiple and treatment-resistant AKs.

  • Dysplastic keratinocytes (notably in basal and lower epidermal layers), parakeratosis, solar elastosis
  • Full-thickness atypia in KIN III (SCC in situ)
  • Invasion beyond BM indicates cSCC
  • ~10 % of AKs progress to invasive SCC (range 0.1–20 %)
  • ~60 % of cutaneous SCCs arise from prior AKs
  • Spontaneous regression in up to 30 %; ~50 % recurrence within 12 months
  • Risk increased in hypertrophic AKs, immunosuppression, and in field cancerization
  • Avoid sun exposure, especially 11 am–3 pm
  • Use UV-protective clothing and broad-spectrum sunscreen (SPF ≥ 50)
  • Regular skin checks in high-risk individuals
  • Retinoids can be considered for chemoprevention in immunosuppressed patients

Favorable with early diagnosis and treatment. Field cancerization mandates ongoing surveillance. Untreated AKs may progress to SCC.

Lesion-targeted management

  • Cryotherapy: standard for solitary AKs (5–20 s freeze; cure rate correlates with duration; side effects: pigment change, scarring)
  • Curettage: useful for hypertrophic lesions

 

Field-directed topical therapies

  • 5 Fluorouracil 5 % cream: gold standard; 1–2×/day for 3–6 weeks; liposomal 0.5 % formulation reduces irritation
  • Imiquimod 5 % or 3.75 %:
    • 5 %: 3×/week for 16 weeks
    • 3.75 %: daily for two 2-week cycles (with breaks)

 

Tirbanibulin 1 % ointment (Klisyri®, Onakta):

  • FDA and EMA approval for face or scalp AK up to 25 cm², expanded to 100 cm² in June 2024
  • Mechanism: microtubule inhibitor and Src kinase blocker → G2/M arrest and apoptosis
  • Pivotal phase III trials: once-daily application for 5 days; clearance rates ~44 54 % vs vehicle ~5–13 % at day 57
  • Real-world data (Italy): 51 % complete clearance, 73 % partial clearance (≥75 %) with excellent adherence; no discontinuation due to adverse events
  • RE expanded sNDA study treating up to 100 cm²: similar efficacy and tolerability; erythema in ~96%, flaking ~85%, resolved by day 29; lesion count reduced from mean 7.7 to 1.8 by day 57; 78 % mean reduction
  • Expert consensus guidelines (EADV, EDF, EADO, UEMS): recommend tirbanibulin as first-line option for most AK patients due to short regimen, favorable tolerability, and high compliance

 

Photodynamic Therapy (PDT)

  • Conventional red-light PDT and daylight PDT are recommended in field cancerization
  • Daylight PDT: equally effective and more tolerable
  • Pulsed daylight PDT (PUL PDT): emerging technology under study 2023–2024

 

Laser / Peeling procedures

  • CO₂ or Er:YAG laser: 90–91 % clearance; 10–15 % recurrence
  • 35–50 % TCA peeling or Jessner’s mix: lesion reduction up to 84 %, but higher recurrence rates in long term

 

Radiotherapy

  • Option for elderly or therapy-resistant patients
  • Fractionated low-dose kV therapy tailored to lesion size

 

Surgical excision

  • Reserved for lesions suspicious for invasive SCC or refractory to other treatment

 

Recent Innovations (2023–2024)

  • Resiquimod (topical TLR7/8 agonist): in phase II trials, showing greater efficacy than imiquimod (off-label)
  • Pulsed daylight PDT: less painful, similar effectiveness; clinical trials in progress
  • AI assisted dermoscopy and automated risk assessment tools are in development for clinical grading and progression prediction
     
  1. Stockfleth et al. Field cancerization in AK. JEADV. 2023;37(2):210–221.
  2. Dirschka et al. AK treatment options. J Clin Aesthet Dermatol. 2022;15(1):S11–24.
  3. Piaserico et al. Reclassifying AK as SCC in situ. Br J Dermatol. 2022;187(4):509–516.
  4. Blauvelt et al. Phase III tirbanibulin trials. N Engl J Med. 2021;384(6):512–520.
  5. Bhatia et al. Safety/tolerability over 100 cm². JAAD Int. 2024;17:6–14.
  6. Dao et al. Tirbanibulin 1 % ointment review. Ann Pharmacother. 2022;56(4):494–500.
  7. Real-world Italian study: 51 % total clearance. Int J Dermatol. 2024.
  8. Schmitz et al. AI risk prediction in AK. Skin Res Technol. 2023;29(5):e13321.