| Literature DB >> 25643667 |
S Puig1, A Berrocal.
Abstract
Despite that basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is curative in the vast majority of cases, some patients are at high risk of recurrence and, in a few patients, lesions can progress to a point unsuitable for local therapy and prognosis is quite poor. The aim of the present work is to review clinical and pathologic characteristics as well as classical and new treatment options for high-risk, metastatic and locally advanced BCC. Surgery and radiotherapy remain the selected treatments for the majority of high-risk lesions. However, some patients are located on a blurry clinical boundary between high-risk and locally advanced BCC. Treatment of these patients is challenging and need an individualized and highly specialized approach. The treatment of locally advanced BCC, in which surgery or radiotherapy is unfeasible, inappropriate or contraindicated, and metastatic BCC has changed with new Hedgehog pathway inhibitors of which vismodegib is the first drug approved by FDA and EMA.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25643667 PMCID: PMC4495248 DOI: 10.1007/s12094-014-1272-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Oncol ISSN: 1699-048X Impact factor: 3.405
Management of high-risk BCC. Recommendations from clinical guidelines
| Guideline, year (references) | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| Sterry 2006 [ | High-risk positive margins or tumor >2 cm in high-risk site: MMS |
| High risk with cosmetic concerns or fragile patients: photodynamic therapy, imiquimod, radiotherapy | |
| Recurrent tumors: >2 cm or infiltrative or high-risk site: MMS | |
| Dandurand 2006 [ | High-risk tumors or previous incomplete resection: MMS when available |
| Multidisciplinary team decision in selected cases | |
| Telfer 2008 [ | High-risk positive margins or tumor >2 cm in high-risk site: MMS |
| High risk with cosmetic concerns or fragile patients: photodynamic therapy, imiquimod, radiotherapy | |
| Recurrent tumors: >2 cm or infiltrative or high-risk site: MMS | |
| Connolly 2012 [ | MMS for primary high-risk and recurrent tumors |
| MMS for nodular tumors in H and M areas (see text) | |
| NCCN 2013 [ | High risk with positive margins: MMS |
| Radiotherapy for advanced and non-surgical candidates |
MMS Mohs micrographic surgery
Fig. 1High-risk basal cell carcinoma on the ear. a Large sclerosing ulcerated plaque infiltrating and eroding the ear helix. A punch biopsy confirmed the presence of infiltrating basal cell carcinoma (BCC). b Final defect after 2 Mohs surgery stages and c side-to-side clousure. d Stage I Mohs map showing positive deep and lateral margins affected and e the ear cartilage (hematoxylin and eosin staining, original magnification ×40). f Stage II showed no residual BCC. Courtesy of Dr Zilinsky and Dr Bennassar
Selected case reports of BCC locally advanced or metastatic with curative intent
| Author, year (references) | Clinical summary | Treatment | Outcome/follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bozikov 2006 [ | T in ear 3 cm; M1 cervical lymphadenopathy | Surgical resection with selective cervical lymph node dissection + RDT | No follow-up |
| Berlin 2002 [ | T in back 3 cm; M1 axillary lymph nodes | MMS + axillary selective dissection | No recurrence after 18 months |
| Fantini 2008 [ | T in axillary skin 1.5 cm, fixed | Wide resection + axillary lymphadenectomy | After 1 year local relapse; after 2 years bone and lung M1 |
| Montgomery 2008 [ | Multiple T in trunk | Preoperative radiotherapy→surgery | No follow-up |
| Majima 2012 [ | T 3 cm in back | Surgical resection | After 4 years M1 supraclavicular and after lung M1 |
| Wadhera A 2006 [ | T 1.5 cm in ear | MMS | Local relapse after 5 years→MMS→ after 1 year parotid M1: resection and radiotherapy. No relapse after 2 additional years |
| Mencía 2005 [ | 80 years. T in lacrimal caruncle | Surgical resection | No recurrence after 7 years |
T tumor, RDT radiotherapy, M1 metastases and MMS Mohs micrographic surgery
Hedgehog pathway inhibitors. Smoothened (Smo) receptor Inhibitors
| Compound | Company |
|---|---|
| Vismodegib (GDC-0449) | Roche, Genentech |
| Sonidegib (LDE225) | Novartis |
| LY2940680 | Eli Lilly |
| BMS-833923 (XLI139) | Bristol-Myers Squibb |
| LEQ-506 | Novartis |
| TAK-441 | Millenium Pharmaceuticals |
| Saridegib (IPI-926) | Infinity Pharmaceuticals |
| PF-04449913 | Pfizer |