MİKS TİP BAZAL HÜCRELİ KARSİNOM OLGULARININ KLİNİK VE DERMOSKOPİK ÖZELLİKLERİNİN İNCELENMESİ

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Date
2024Author
zaid, fathi
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Zaid F., Examination of the Clinical and Dermoscopic Features of Mixed-Type
Basal Cell Carcinoma Cases. Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine,
Department of Dermatology and Venereology, Ankara, 2024. Basal cell carcinoma
(BCC) is a malignant skin tumor thought to develop from epidermal basal cells or the
outer root sheath of hair follicles. Identifying the histopathological subtype can guide
treatment selection and patient follow-up. While histopathological examination is the
gold standard for subtype determination, dermoscopic examination can also be helpful.
Dermoscopic findings related to histopathological subtypes in BCC have been
identified, but the changes in these dermoscopic features in mixed-type BCC
combinations remain unclear. This study aims to examine the demographic
characteristics of patients diagnosed with single and mixed-type BCC
histopathologically in our clinic and investigate the correlation between clinical and
dermoscopic findings and histopathological subtypes. For this purpose, adult patients
in our center who were diagnosed with BCC through histopathological analysis
following total excision, with dermoscopic findings systematically recorded through
photographic documentation, were included in the study. A total of 186 BCC lesions
from 157 patients, with a mean age of 68.8±12.7 years (range: 30–94), were evaluated.
The most frequent lesion location was the head and neck region (74.7%), and the
histopathological subtypes were nodular (42.5%), mixed (37.6%), superficial (12.4%),
basosquamous (3.2%), infiltrative (2.7%), micronodular (1.1%), and fibroepithelial
(0.5%). Among mixed-type BCCs, the most common histopathological subtype
combinations were nodular-infiltrative (32.9%) and nodular-superficial (31.4%). In
dermoscopy, short fine telangiectasia (p<0.001), yellow-white structureless areas
(p=0.023), scales (p=0.020), and rosette structures (p=0.003) were observed more
frequently in mixed-type lesions than in single-type lesions. In contrast, corkscrew
vessel patterns were more prevalent in single-type lesions (p=0.048). The presence of
a superficial histopathological component in mixed-type lesions was associated with
an increased wheel-like structure in dermoscopy, while the presence of an infiltrative
component was associated with dotted and glomerular vessel patterns, and
basosquamous components were linked to arborizing vessel patterns. Additionally, in
mixed-type BCCs, the dermoscopic findings of arborizing vessel patterns (p=0.019)
and dotted vessel patterns (p=0.025) were associated with high-risk subtypes. In
conclusion, our study suggests that dermoscopic findings may serve as a guide in
recognizing mixed-type BCC lesions, distinguishing subtype components, and
assisting in treatment decision-making based on these observations.
Keywords: Basal cell carcinoma (BCC), dermoscopy, mixed-type BCC.