| Literature DB >> 33594659 |
Philip R Cohen1,2, Marta Torres-Quiñones3, Nathan S Uebelhoer4.
Abstract
Red dot basal cell carcinoma is a distinctive clinical subtype of basal cell carcinoma. It has been reported in eight individuals with a male to female ratio of 1:1; and the patients' ages ranged from 50 to 74 years. All patients had prior history of actinic keratoses and basal cell carcinoma. In addition, some patients also had prior squamous cell carcinoma, malignant melanoma, and/or dysplastic nevus. The tumor was usually of recent onset, asymptomatic, and on sun-exposed skin. It was most commonly located on the nose (five patients); other sites were the upper lip, the mid back, or thigh-each in one patient. The red dot basal cell carcinoma was solitary and small-usually 4 mm or less in diameter. It typically presented as a red macule or papule; however, it sometimes appeared as a flesh-colored or pink to light-red papule with a bright-red central area. Microscopic features showed basaloid tumor cells (arranged as either nodular aggregates or superficial buds or both). In the central portion of the lesion, there was a proliferation of erythrocyte-containing vascular spaces between the epidermis and the neoplasm. The basal cell carcinoma pathology subtype was either nodular and superficial (three patients), nodular (two patients), or superficial (one patient). The clinical differential diagnosis of red dot basal cell carcinoma included not only benign vascular lesions (such as hemangioma and telangiectasia) but also inflammatory conditions and adnexal tumors. Other basaloid cell neoplasms were in the pathologic differential diagnosis. The pathogenesis of red dot basal cell carcinoma is similar to that of other basal cell carcinoma clinical subtypes. Mohs surgery is the treatment of choice for red dot basal cell carcinomas. Red dot basal cell carcinoma has two categories of biologic behavior based on the ratio of the postoperative wound size as compared with the size of the preoperative tumor: nonaggressive (for which the ratio was 5:1 or less for three patients) and aggressive (for which the ratio was greater than 12:1 for three patients). There was no recurrence of the red dot basal cell carcinoma after treatment. In conclusion, the incidence of red dot basal cell carcinoma-a unique morphologic variant of basal cell carcinoma-may be higher than suggested by the number of reported patients with this basal cell carcinoma subtype.Entities:
Keywords: Basal; Carcinoma; Cell; Dot; Hemangioma; Red; Subtype; Telangiectasia; Variant; Vascular
Year: 2021 PMID: 33594659 PMCID: PMC8018996 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-021-00496-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Red dot basal cell carcinoma publications
| Authors | Comment | References |
|---|---|---|
Johnson et al. August 1994 | In the section on morphologic characteristics of unusual BCCs, red dot or halo BCC was mentioned. The authors commented that the tumor usually occurred on sun-exposed areas; its clinical appearance was a small (1–2 mm) red papule, sometimes with a halo. Early diagnosis required a high index of suspicion | [ |
Tromberg et al. October 2012 | The red dot BCC of two patients were described, and the features of this tumor were shared. The authors commented that red dot BCC is a distinct and early clinical presentation of BCC that they regularly encountered in their practice | [ |
Loh and Cohen May 2016 | A female patient with a red dot BCC on her distal left nasal bridge is described. The authors compare and discuss the clinical, diascopy, biopsy, and treatment features of red dot BCC and telangiectasia | [ |
Cohen March 2017 | Three patients with red dot BCC were described. The BCC was located on either the mid back (one female), the nasal tip (one male), or the nostril (one male). The characteristics of these patients and those of the previously reported four individuals with this clinical variant of BCC were reviewed | [ |
Cohen May 2017 | The paper, accepted for publication in December 2014, includes the description of a female with a red dot BCC on the distal lateral left thigh proximal to her knee. The author commented that it may be challenging to clinically differentiate red dot BCC from a similar appearing vascular lesion such as an angioma or a telangiectasia | [ |
Cohen et al. September 2018 | The paper is a patient and physician’s experience regarding BCC. In the physician’s perspective, red dot BCC is included the discussion and table of clinical types of BCC | [ |
Cohen July 2019 | A letter to the editor—in reply to a review article on BCC that had not mentioned red dot BCC—that emphasized the inclusion of red dot BCC as a unique clinical variant of BCC | [ |
Cohen et al. 2021 | A comprehensive literature review of red dot BCC; a new description of a red dot BCC on the right side of the patient’s upper lip is included in the figure legends | CR |
BCC basal cell carcinoma, CR current report
aMonth and year of publication
Fig. 1Clinical presentation of a red dot basal cell carcinoma on the right side of the upper lip. A 65-year-old Caucasian male had a history of a junctional dysplastic nevus with moderate atypia on his right distal leg, actinic keratoses, a superficial basal cell carcinoma on his right chest, and a superficial spreading malignant melanoma, Breslow thickness 0.2 mm, on his left anterior thigh. He presented with an asymptomatic lesion of not more than 3 months duration; there had been no trauma to the site. Right (a) and frontal (b) views showed a pink to red-colored 4 × 6 mm papule with a central red dot on the right side of the upper lip. The clinical differential diagnosis included an angioma, a basal cell carcinoma and an adnexal tumor. A shave biopsy was performed
Fig. 2Microscopic features of a red dot basal cell carcinoma that was present on the right side of the upper lip of a 65-year-old male. Distant (a) and closer (b–d) views of the biopsy tissue specimen of the red dot basal cell carcinoma were stained with hematoxylin and eosin stains. There are mounds of parakeratosis overlying an acanthotic epidermis. In the center of the specimen, there are superficial buds and a nodular aggregate of basaloid tumor cells that extend from the overlying epithelium into the underlying dermis. Adjacent and beneath the nests of basal cell carcinoma, there is a dense lymphocytic inflammatory infiltrate. In the papillary dermis, between the epidermis and the tumor, there are numerous benign dilated endothelial-lined vascular spaces that contain erythrocytes (hematoxylin and eosin: a ×4; b ×10; c ×20; d ×40)
Fig. 3Excision of red dot basal cell carcinoma and closure of the surgical wound on the right side of the upper lip of a 65-year-old male. Correlation of the clinical presentation and the pathologic findings of the lesion on the right side of the upper lip of the 65-year-old male was a red dot basal cell carcinoma (with superficial and nodular tumor aggregates). The tumor was excised using the Mohs technique. Curettage of the site prior to the initial incision was unremarkable. One stage was required for cancer removal. The postoperative defect was 8 × 9 mm; the purple markings show the planned excisions of the standing cones to convert the oval wound into an ellipse (a). The final defect (b) was closed with a complex linear repair using a synthetic absorbable monofilament 5–0 polydioxanone (PDS) suture for closing the dermis and a synthetic nonabsorbable monofilament 6–0 polypropylene (prolene) suture for bring the epidermal edges together; side (c) and frontal (d) views show the 2.8 cm linear closure on the right side of the upper lip after completion of suturing. There has been no recurrence 3 months after surgery
Characteristics of patients with red dot basal cell carcinoma
| C | A | History of AK or skin tumor | Site of BCC | Size: Preop | Dias | Pathology subtype of BCC | Treatment | Follow up: | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 50 W | AK 4 BCC 2 MM 1 SCC | Left thigh | 3 × 3 NS NS | NS | Nodular | ED and C | – NS | [ |
| 2 | 65 M | AK 1 BCC 1 JDN 1 MM | Right upper lip | 4 × 6 8 × 9 3:1 | NS | Nodular and superficial | Mohs, S1 CLR | – 3 months | CR |
| 3 | 70 M | AK 4 BCC | Nasal tip | 3 × 3 11 × 10 12:1 | NS | Nodular and superficial | Mohs, S2 FTSG | – 5 months | [ |
| 4 | 71 M | AK 1 BCC 1 SCC | Left nostril | 2 × 2 NS NS | – | Nodular | Mohs | – NS | [ |
| 5 | 72 W | AK 2 BCC 1 SCC | Left nasal bridge | 2 × 3 10 × 10 17:1 | + | Superficial | Mohs, S2 FTSG | – NS | [ |
| 6 | 74 W | AK 8 BCC | Left mid back | 7 × 9 15 × 11 3:1 | + | Nodular and superficial | Mohs, S1 CLC | – 6 mon | [ |
| 7 | NS NS | NS | Left nasal ala | 2 × 2 4 × 5 5:1 | NS | NS | Mohs | NS NS | [ |
| 8 | NS NS | NS | Right nasal sidewall | 4 × 4 15 × 15 14:1 | NS | NS | Mohs | NS NS | [ |
A age (in years at diagnosis), AK actinic keratosis, BCC basal cell carcinoma, C case, CLC complex layered closure, CLR complex linear repair, CR current report, Dias diascopy (blanchable after compression of the lesion with a glass microscope slide is positive), Dur duration (months) free of tumor after treatment, ED and C electrodessication and curettage, FTSG full thickness skin graft, G gender, JDN junctional dysplastic nevus with moderate dysplasia, M man, NS not stated, Preop preoperative size of tumor in millimeters, Postop postoperative wound size in millimeters, Rat (Po:Pr) ratio of postoperative tumor area to preoperative wound area, Recur recurrence of basal cell carcinoma, S1 one Mohs stage to clear tumor, S2 two Mohs stages to clear tumor, SCC squamous cell carcinoma, W woman, x by, + present, – absent
| Red dot basal cell carcinoma is a unique morphologic variant of basal cell carcinoma—usually of recent onset, asymptomatic, and on sun-exposed skin—that has been described in eight individuals who ranged in age from 50 to 74 years. |
| Red dot basal cell carcinoma is a small (less than 4 mm), solitary, red macule or papule that was located on the face (nose, five patients or upper lip, one patient), the mid back (one patient) or thigh (one patient). |
| Red dot basal cell carcinoma microscopically showed erythrocyte-containing vascular spaces in the center of the lesion between the epidermis and the dermal basaloid tumor cells. |
| Mohs surgery is the treatment of choice for red dot basal cell carcinoma. |
| The incidence of red dot basal cell carcinoma may be higher than suggested by the number of reported patients with this basal cell carcinoma subtype. |