Dysplastic/Pre-malignant Skin Lesions

Actinic (solar) keratoses

  • Partial thickness dysplasia of epidermal keratinocytes
  • A small minority (<1%) of actinic keratoses undergo malignant transformation into squamous cell carcinoma

Clinical presentation

  • Appear as scaly, erythematous papules or patches and feel gritty and rough
  • Occur on sun exposed skin especially scalp, face, hands - marker of chronic sun damage
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Management

  • Lesion-based treatments - cryotherapy, curettage and cautery
  • Field based treatments (aimed at clearing visible and subclinical lesions over a larger area) - topical 5-fluorouracil, imiquimod, photodynamic therapy

Bowen’s disease (intraepithelial carcinoma)

  • Squamous cell carcinoma in situ - full thickness dysplasia of epidermal keratinocytes

Clinical presentation

  • Typically affects the lower legs in fair-skinned women or the torso in men
  • Lesions appear as slowly enlarging, well-demarkated, scaly red patch/plaque with an irregular border
  • A variant of Bowen’s disease can affect the genital mucosa - vulval, penile or anal intraepithelial neoplasia
    • Strong link with HPV-16 and 18 infection, also more common in immunosuppressed individuals (including HIV)
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Management

  • Similar to actinic keratosis - cryotherapy, 5-flurouracil cream, imiquimod, photodynamic therapy

Keratoacanthoma

  • Rapidly growing epidermal tumours

Clinical presentation

  • Develop as a red papule with a central crater-like, crusty keratinous plug
  • Occur on sun-exposed skin in later life and often reach 2–3 cm in diameter
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Management

  • Although they regress spontaneously after about 3 months, leaving a pitted scar, they are usually excised, as it can be extremely difficult to distinguish them from squamous cell carcinoma