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Dermoscopy of Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Keratoacanthoma

Cliff Rosendahl, MBBS; Alan Cameron, MBBS; Giuseppe Argenziano, MD; Iris Zalaudek, MD; Philipp Tschandl, MD; Harald Kittler, MD
Arch Dermatol. 2012;148(12):1386-1392. doi:10.1001/archdermatol.2012.2974.
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Objectives  To characterize dermoscopic criteria of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and keratoacanthoma and to compare them with other lesions.

Design  Observer-masked study of consecutive lesions performed from March 1 through December 31, 2011.

Setting  Primary care skin cancer practice in Brisbane, Australia.

Participants  A total of 186 patients with 206 lesions.

Main Outcome Measures  Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and odds ratios.

Results  In a retrospective analysis of 60 invasive SCC and 43 keratoacanthoma cases, keratin, surface scale, blood spots, white structureless zones, white circles, and coiled vessels were commonly found in both types of lesions. We reevaluated the significance of these criteria in 206 raised, nonpigmented lesions (32 SCCs, 29 keratoacanthomas, and 145 other lesions). Central keratin was more common in keratoacanthoma than in SCC (51.2% vs 30.0%, P = .03). Keratin had the highest sensitivity for keratoacanthoma and SCC (79%), and white circles had the highest specificity (87%). When keratoacanthoma and SCC were contrasted with basal cell carcinoma, the positive predictive values of keratin and white circles were 92% and 89%, respectively. When SCC and keratoacanthoma were contrasted with actinic keratosis and Bowen disease, the positive predictive value of keratin was 50% and that of white circles was 92%. In a multivariate model, white circles, keratin, and blood spots were independent predictors of SCC and keratoacanthoma. White circles had the highest odds ratio in favor of SCC and keratoacanthoma. The interobserver agreement for white circles was good (0.55; 95% CI, 0.44-0.65).

Conclusions  White circles, keratin, and blood spots are useful clues to differentiate SCC and keratoacanthoma from other raised nonpigmented skin lesions by dermoscopy. The significance of these criteria depends on the clinical context.

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Figures

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Grahic Jump Location

Figure 1. White circles in squamous cell carcinoma. Clinical (A and C) and corresponding dermoscopy (B and D) images of 2 invasive squamous cell carcinomas with prominent white circles on dermoscopy. The white circles are centered around a dilated infundibulum filled with a keratin plug that is visible as a yellow or an orange clod on dermoscopy. The clinical differential diagnoses include basal cell carcinoma and amelanotic melanoma and other benign and malignant nonpigmented skin lesions.

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Grahic Jump Location

Figure 2. Central keratin and blood spots as dermoscopic clues to squamous cell carcinoma and keratoacanthoma. Clinical (A and C) and corresponding dermoscopy (B and D) images of 2 keratoacanthomas with central keratin on dermoscopy. The dermoscopy of the keratoacanthoma shown in B also shows white circles. Blood spots are found within keratin (B and D) and help to differentiate keratin from scale.

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Grahic Jump Location

Figure 3. Dermoscopic-pathologic correlation of white circles. This micrograph shows the dermatopathology of the squamous cell carcinoma shown in Figure 1D. White circles correspond to acanthosis and hypergranulosis of infundibular epidermis, which explains the geometric expression as a circle and why the circle is centered around a dilated infundibulum filled with a keratin plug that is visible as a yellow or an orange clod on dermoscopy.

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