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Basal Cell Carcinoma Cure - Basal Cell CarcinomaMedicine Drug
TREATMENT CENTERS - SURVIVAL RATE - DRUGS AND MEDICINE - INFORMATION - ATTORNEYS
Basal Cell Carcinoma Cure - Basal Cell CarcinomaMedicine Drug

Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common form of skin cancer.[1] It can be destructive and disfiguring. The risk of developing BCC is increased for individuals with a family history of the disease and with a high cumulative exposure to UV light via sunlight[1] or, in the past, were exposed to carcinogenic chemicals, especially arsenic. Treatment is with surgery, topical chemotherapy, X-ray, cryosurgery, or photodynamic therapy. It is rarely life-threatening but, if left untreated, can be disfiguring, cause bleeding, and produce local destruction (e.g., eye, ear, nose, lip). Basal cell skin cancer almost never spreads; but, if untreated, it may grow into surrounding areas and nearby tissues and bone.[1]

 

Contents [hide]

1 Forms

2 Presentation

3 Diagnosis

4 Pathophysiology

5 Prevention and early diagnosis

6 Treatment

7 Prognosis

8 Epidemiology

9 Notes

10 References

11 External links

 

 

 

[edit] Forms

Various forms are recognized:

 

Nodular: flesh-colored papule with telangiectasis; if it ulcerates, it becomes a "rodent ulcer" (ulcus rodens), an ulcerating nodule with (often) a pearly border

Cystic: rarer and difficult to distinguish from the nodular form, which has a central cavity with fluid

Pigmented: a variant of the nodular form that may be confused with melanoma

Sclerosing/cicratising: a scar-like lesion

Superficial: a red scaling patch.

About two-thirds of basal cell carcinomas occur on sun-exposed areas of the body. One-third occur on areas of the body that are not exposed to sunlight, emphasizing the genetic susceptibility of the basal cell cancer patients.

 

basal cell carcinoma

 

 

 

[edit] Presentation

Basal Cell Carcinomas present as a firm nodule, clearly growing within the skin and below it, rather than on the surface.

 

Color varies from that of normal skin to dark brown or black, but there is a characteristic "pearly white" translucent quality on the periphery.

 

Basal Cell Carcinomas display a characteristic "rolled edge." Once the basal cells have invaded the deeper tissues, the rolled edge disappears.

 

When BCCs occur at sites other than the face and neck, they are usually just red, flat, scaling areas. Thus, superficial BCCs can often be confused with a patch of eczema.

 

 

[edit] Diagnosis

To diagnose basal cell carcinomas, a biopsy (where tissue is taken for pathological study) is done using local anesthesia. In small lesions, the tumor is, in general, removed in its entiriety, whereas larger ones are biopsied first and surgically removed later if it is confirmed that it is malignant.

 

Histopathology: Basal cell carcinoma is a malignant epithelial tumor arising only in skin, from the basal layer of the epidermis or of the pilosebaceous adnexa. Tumor is represented by compact areas, well delineated and invading the dermis, apparent with no connection with the epidermis. Tumor cells resemble normal basal cells (small, monomorphous) and are disposed in palisade at the periphery of the tumor nests, but are spindle-shaped and irregular in the middle. Tumor clusters are separated by a reduced stroma with inflammatory infiltrate. 1

 

 

[edit] Pathophysiology

 

Histology of a nodular basal cell carcinomaBasal cell carcinomas develop in the basal cell layer of the skin. Sunlight exposure leads to the formation of thymine dimers, a form of DNA damage. While DNA repair removes most UV-induced damage, not all crosslinks are excised. There is, therefore, cumulative DNA damage leading to mutations. Apart from the mutagenesis, sunlight depresses the local immune system, possibly decreasing immune surveillance for new tumor cells.

 

Basal-cell carcinoma also develops as a result of basal-cell nevus syndrome, or Gorlin's syndrome, which is also characterized by odontogenic keratocysts of the jaw, palmar or plantar (sole of the foot) pits, calcification of the falx cerebri (in the center line of the brain) and rib abnormalities. The cause of the syndrome is a mutation in the PTCH1 tumor-suppressor gene at chromosome 9q22.3, which inhibits the hedgehog signaling pathway. A mutation in the SMO gene, which is also on the hedgehog pathway, also causes basal-cell carcinoma.[2]

 

 

[edit] Prevention and early diagnosis

Basal cell carcinoma is the most common skin cancer. It occurs mainly in fair-skinned patients with a family history of this cancer. Sunlight is a factor in about two-thirds of these cancers, but one-third occur in non-sun-exposed areas. Therefore, dermatologists recommend sun screens and annual skin cancer exams to prevent or provide early detection of this common tumor.

 

 

[edit] Treatment

Most basal cell carcinomas are removed by surgery. A common method is "electrodessication and curettage" (ED&C). This is done by scraping the tumor out with a curette and cauterizing the base and margins. The wound is left to heal by itself (secondary intention healing). The cure rate and cosmetic result are excellent, especially in concave areas. It is also the most cost-effective treatment. Surgical excision is another option with the margins of excised tissue examined under the microscope. Certain types, like the sclerosing basal cell cancers, may need a wider margin, as they develop subtle processes that project outside the visible part of the tumor. Although BCCs are termed carcinomas, they are not invasive cancers - and are therefore not included in national cancer statistics.

 

Some superficial cancers respond to local therapy with 5-fluorouracil, a chemotherapy agent. Topical treatment with 5% IMIQUIMOD cream (see below also), with 5 applications per week for six weeks has a reported 70% - 90% success rate at reducing, even removing, the BCC [basal cell carcinoma]. Imiquimod may be used prior to surgery in order to reduce the size of the carcinoma. See Chemotherapy. One can expect a great deal of inflammation with this treatment.

 

A new immune enhancement agent (topical imiquimod, "Aldara") is effective for the treatment of superficial skin cancers (basal cell and squamous cell cancer, and even malignant melanoma in-situ). It is also used pre-operatively to shrink nodular basal cell cancers, thus allowing a smaller surgical excision.

 

X-ray is still appropriate in older patients that are not candidates for surgery. Cryosurgery is another option, particularly for basal cell cancer that invades cartilage, as the healthy cartilage is cryo-resistant.

 

There is also a new treatment using Euphorbia peplus a common garden weed. [1]

 

 

[edit] Prognosis

Although basal cell carcinoma rarely metastasizes, it grows locally without stopping. The cancer can impinge on vital structures and result in loss extension or loss of function or rarely death. The vast majority of cases can be successfully treated before serious complications occur.

 

 

[edit] Epidemiology

Basal cell cancer is the most common skin cancer. It is much more common in fair-skinned individuals with a family history of basal cell cancer and increases in incidence closer to the equator or at higher altitude. According to Skin Cancer Foundation[2], there are approximately 800,000[3] new cases yearly in the United States alone.

 

Most sporadic BCC arises in small numbers on sun-exposed skin of people over age 50, although younger people may also be affected. The development of multiple basal cell cancer at an early age could be indicative of Nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome.

 

 

[edit] Notes

^ a b c "MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Basal cell carcinoma" (symptoms/treatment), U.S. National Library of Medicine, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD, and National Institutes of Health, USA, October 2007, webpage: BCC.

^ Epstein EH et al., Case 3-2008: An 80-year-old woman with cutaneous basal-cell carcinoma and cysts of the jaw, N Engl J Med (2008) 358:393-401

 

[edit] References

"MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Basal cell carcinoma" (symptoms/treatment), MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia, U.S. National Library of Medicine, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD, and National Institutes of Health, USA, October 2007, webpage: BCC.

 

[edit] External links

Natural history of Basal cell carcinoma

Basal cell carcinoma of the nose

 

 


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