| Literature DB >> 32751327 |
Mauro Cives1,2, Francesco Mannavola1, Lucia Lospalluti3, Maria Chiara Sergi1, Gerardo Cazzato4, Elisabetta Filoni1, Federica Cavallo1, Giuseppe Giudice5, Luigia Stefania Stucci1, Camillo Porta1, Marco Tucci1,2.
Abstract
Non-melanoma skin cancers (NMSCs) include basal cell carcinoma (BCC), squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC). These neoplasms are highly diverse in their clinical presentation, as well as in their biological evolution. While the deregulation of the Hedgehog pathway is commonly observed in BCC, SCC and MCC are characterized by a strikingly elevated mutational and neoantigen burden. As result of our improved understanding of the biology of non-melanoma skin cancers, innovative treatment options including inhibitors of the Hedgehog pathway and immunotherapeutic agents have been recently investigated against these malignancies, leading to their approval by regulatory authorities. Herein, we review the most relevant biological and clinical features of NMSC, focusing on innovative treatment approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Hedgehog pathway; Merkel cell carcinoma; anti-PD1 monoclonal antibodies; basal cell carcinoma; immunotherapy; skin cancer; squamous cell carcinoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32751327 PMCID: PMC7432795 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21155394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Genetic syndromes associated with NMSC.
| Syndrome | Type of NMSC | Clinical Features |
|---|---|---|
| Xeroderma Pigmentosus | BCC SCC | Autosomal recessive disorder characterized by defects in the mechanisms of DNA repair. NMSCs are frequently developed by younger (≤20 years). The risk is directly associated to UVR exposition. |
| Oculocutaneous Albinism | SCC | Autosomal recessive disease showing a pigmentary dilution of the skin, eyes, and hair. SCCs are frequently developed by young subjects exposed to UVR. A high incidence of metastatic SCC has been described in black population. |
| Epidermodysplasia Verruciformis | SCC | Rare and usually recessively inherited disorder characterized by a colonization of the skin by HPV. The majority of patients develop NMSC as adults, usually in sun-exposed regions, but earlier with respect to the general population. Aggressive biological behavior includes perineural spread, metastases and death. |
| Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa | SCC | It is characterized by both dominant and recessive mutations of the type VII collagen gene. The majority of recessive patients develop SCCs, that occur during the third-fifth decade of life, frequently multiple and with high attitude to local recurrence and spreading to distant metastatic sites. |
| Basal Cell Nevous Syndrome (Gorlin) | BCC | It is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by inactivating mutations of |
| Bazex-Dupré-Christol Syndrome | BCC | It is a rare condition characterized by follicular atrophoderma of the hands and feet, hypotrichosis, localized hypohidrosis, epidermoid cysts and multiple BCCs developed during the second decade of lifer showing a trichoepithelioma-like histology. The inheritance pattern is often X-linked. |
| Rombo Syndrome | BCC | Patients have an atrophoderma vermiculatum-like appearance on the cheeks with evidence of sweat duct proliferation. They often suffer of hypotrichosis, blepharitis, peripheral erythema, trichoepithelioma and skin cancer. |
Figure 1Representative clinical patterns and dermatoscopy of BCCs: (a) clinical features and (b) dermatoscopy of superficial BCC of the cheek; (c) ulcerated and (d) multifocal BCC; (e) nodular pigmented BCC of the zigomatic area and (f) relative pattern by dermatoscopy; and (g,h) Effect of Hedgehog inhibitors in a patient with advanced BCC of the head.
Figure 2Histologic patterns of BCC: (a) adenoid variant of nodular BCC showing island of tumor cells characterized by a cribriform pattern; (b) superficial BCC; (c) micronodular BCC; and (d) morpheaform variant showing malignant cells surrounded by a sclerotic stroma enriched in collagen. The infiltrative features are also shown.
Clinical and histologic risk factors associated with squamous cell carcinoma (NCCN Guidelines).
|
|
|
|
| Site and Size | Area L; <20 mm | Area L; ≥20 mm |
| Margins | Well defined; R0 | Undefined or R1 |
| Immune Suppression | Absence | Presence |
| Exposition to radiotherapy or chronic inflammatory process | Absence | Presence |
| Rapid growth | Absence | Presence |
| Neurological symptoms | Absence | Presence |
|
|
|
|
| Grading | G1 or G2 | G3 |
| Adenoid-squamous, Adenoid-cystic, | Absence | Any Variant |
| Thickness or level of invasion | ≤6 mm and no subcutaneous invasion | >6 mm or subcutaneous invasion |
| Perineural, lymphatic or vascular invasion | Absence | Presence |
Figure 3Clinical features of SSCs. Panels are representative of clinical presentation and response to immunotherapy: (a) SCC of the nose that arises on photo-damaged skin in presence of actinic keratosis of the left eyebrow; (b) high grade SCC of the left commissura of the lower lip; (c) SCC of the hand in patients in active treatment for concomitant LLC; (d) SCC originated on previous burned skin; and (e,f) effect of six-months course of anti-PD-1 MoAb in a patient with locally advanced SCC unfit for further surgery.
Figure 4Histologic variants of SSC. Panels are representative of histologic patterns from patients with SCC. (a) A moderately differentiated and ulcerated lesion showing enlarged, hyperchromatic and irregular nuclei. Corneal pearls in the middle reflect the keratinization ability. Malignant cells are surrounded by abundant inflammatory cells. (b) Verrucous SCC characterized by deeply invasive properties. (c) Spindle cell SCC showing elongate, fusiform cells that blend with the surrounding reactive fibroblastic component. (d) Acantholytic SCC characterized by a pseudoghiandolar pattern and dyskeratosis of tumor cells. The acantholytic phenomenon affects the inner portion of invasive nests and lobules.
Figure 5Representative histologic patterns from MCC. (a,b) Histology of MCC characterized by deep infiltration of the dermis by lymphocytes at 4× (a) and 10× (b) magnification.