| Literature DB >> 35053539 |
Ignazio Stanganelli1,2, Francesco Spagnolo3, Giuseppe Argenziano4, Paolo A Ascierto5, Franco Bassetto6, Paolo Bossi7, Vittorio Donato8, Daniela Massi9, Cesare Massone10, Roberto Patuzzo11, Giovanni Pellacani12, Pietro Quaglino13, Paola Queirolo14, Iris Zalaudek15, Giuseppe Palmieri16.
Abstract
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (CSCC) account for about 20% of all keratinocyte carcinomas, which are the most common form of cancer. Heterogeneity of treatments and low mortality are a challenge in obtaining accurate incidence data and consistent registration in cancer registries. Indeed, CSCC mostly presents as an indolent, low-risk lesion, with five-year cure rates greater than 90% after surgical excision, and only few tumors are associated with a high-risk of local or distant relapse; therefore, it is particularly relevant to identify high-risk lesions among all other low-risk CSCCs for the proper diagnostic and therapeutic management. Chemotherapy achieves mostly short-lived responses that do not lead to a curative effect and are associated with severe toxicities. Due to an etiopathogenesis largely relying on chronic UV radiation exposure, CSCC is among the tumors with the highest rate of somatic mutations, which are associated with increased response rates to immunotherapy. Thanks to such strong pre-clinical rationale, clinical trials led to the approval of anti-PD-1 cemiplimab by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and EMA (European Medicines Agency), and anti-PD-1 pembrolizumab by the FDA only. Here, we provide a literature review and clinical recommendations by a panel of experts regarding the diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of CSCC.Entities:
Keywords: anti-PD-1; cemiplimab; cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma; guidelines; immune checkpoint inhibitors; immunotherapy; keratinocyte carcinomas; recommendations; skin cancer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35053539 PMCID: PMC8773547 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14020377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
WHO classification of skin tumors: differences between third and fourth editions.
| WHO Classification 3rd Edition | WHO Classification 4th Edition | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Keratinocytic Tumours | Keratinocytic/Epidermal Tumors/Carcinomas | ||
| Squamous Cell Carcinoma | 8070/3 | Squamous Cell Carcinoma, NOS | 8070/3 |
| Acantholytic squamous cell carcinoma | 8075/3 | Keratoacanthoma | 8071/3 |
| Spindle-cell squamous cell carcinoma | 8074/3 | Acantholytic squamous cell carcinoma * | 8075/3 |
| Verrucous squamous cell carcinoma | 8051/3 | Spindle cell squamous cell carcinoma * | 8074/3 |
| Pseudovascular squamous cell carcinoma | 8075/3 | Adenosquamous carcinoma * | 8051/3 |
| Adenosquamous carcinoma | 8560/3 | Clear cell squamous cell carcinoma | 8560/3 |
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| Bowen disease | 8081/2 | Squamous cell carcinoma with sarcomatoid differentiation * | 8074/3 |
| Bowenoid papulosis | Lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma | 8082/3 | |
| Pseudovascular squamous cell carcinoma | 8074/3 | ||
| Squamous cell carcinoma with osteoclast-like giant cells | 8035/3 | ||
| Squamous cell carcinoma in situ (Bowen disease) | 8070/2 | ||
* High risk.
Template for reporting pathological margins as proposed by the Royal College of Pathologists.
| Margins | Involved | Not Involved | Uncertain | Not Applicable | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <1 mm | 1–5 mm | >5 mm | ||||
| Peripheral | □ | □ | □ | □ | □ | □ |
| Deep | □ | □ | □ | □ | □ | □ |
Summary of high-risk factors for primary squamous cell carcinoma according to recent staging systems and guidelines.
| High-Risk Factors | AJCC 8th ed. Classification | BWH Classification | NCCN Guidelines | EADO Guidelines |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Immunosuppression | Not included | Not included | Yes | Yes |
| Site of prior RT or chronic inflammation | Not included | Not included | Yes | Not included |
| Neurological symptoms/symptomatic PNI | Yes | Not included | Yes | Yes |
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| Large clinical diameter | >2 cm | ≥2 cm | ≥2 cm area L * | >2 cm |
| ≥1 cm area M * | ||||
| Any for area H * | ||||
| Anatomical location of primary tumor | Not included | Not included | Area H | Ear, lip, temple |
| Poorly defined tumor borders | Not included | Not included | Yes | Not included |
| Rapidly growing tumor | Not included | Not included | Yes | Not included |
| Recurrent tumor | Not included | Not included | Yes | Not included |
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| Bone involvement | Yes | Yes | Not included | Yes |
| Perineural invasion on imaging | Yes | Yes | Not included | Yes |
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| Breslow thickness > 6 mm | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Poor differentiation | Not included | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| High-risk histological subtype | Not included | Not included | Yes | Yes |
| Perineural invasion | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Lymphatic or vascular invasion | Not included | Not included | Yes | Not included |
| Invasion beyond subcutaneous fat | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Abbreviations: BWH: Brigham and Women’s Hospital; PNI: perineural invasion; RT: radiotherapy. * Area L: trunk and extremities (excluding hands, nail units, pretibial, ankles, feet); Area H: central face, eyelids, eyebrows, periorbital, nose, lips (cutaneous and vermillion), chin, mandible, preauricular and postauricular skin/sulci, temple, ear, genitalia, hands, and feet; Area M: cheeks, forehead, scalp, neck, and pretibial.
Risk factors for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma recurrence, metastasis, and disease-specific death.
| High-Risk Factors | RR for Local Relapse | RR for Locoregional Relapse | RR for Disease-Specific Death |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Maximum tumor diameter > 20 mm | 3.22 | 6.15 | 19.10 |
| Temple, ear, or lip location | 3.20 | 2.82 | 4.67 |
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| Breslow thickness > 6 mm | 7.13 | 6.93 | - |
| Invasion beyond subcutaneous fat | 7.61 | 11.21 | 4.49 |
| Poor differentiation | 2.66 | 4.98 | 5.65 |
| PNI | 4.30 | 2.95 | 4.06 |
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| Immunosuppression | 1.51 | 1.59 | 0.35 |
Abbreviations: NA: not available; PNI: perineural invasion; RR: risk ratio.
Minimum safety margins recommended by the NCCN, EDF-EADO-EORTC, and AIOM for the surgical treatment of low- and high-risk cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma.
| NCCN | EDF-EADO-EORTC | AIOM | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4–6 mm | 5 mm | 4 mm |
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| 6–9 mm | 10 mm | 6 mm |
Figure 1Algorithm of management of patients with actinic keratosis. Maintenance therapy may include agents such as nicotinamide, polypodium, and photoliasis. Abbreviations: 5FU: 5-fluororacil; AK: actinic keratosis; Crio: cryotherapy; CSCC: cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma; DL: day light photodynamic therapy; IMQ: imiquimod.
T classification for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma according to Brigham and Women’s Hospital staging system.
| T Category | |
|---|---|
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| Primary tumor cannot be identified |
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| Carcinoma in situ |
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| Primary tumor without risk factors |
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| Primary tumor with 1 risk factor |
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| Primary tumor with 2–3 risk factors |
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| Primary tumor with 4 risk factors or bone invasion |
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• Tumor diameter ≥ 2 cm |
Figure 2Algorithm for the follow-up of patients with cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma. Dermatologic inspection should always include lymph node palpation. Clinical evaluation and imaging should be tailored to patient life expectancy and comorbidities. Additional exams may be necessary according to symptoms or clinical suspect. Abbreviations: AK: actinic keratosis; CSCC: cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma; laCSCC: locally advanced cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma; mCSCC: metastatic cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma.
Summary of results with chemotherapy and cetuximab for the treatment of advanced cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC).
| Overall Response Rate | Duration of Response | Progression-Free Survival | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 44% | Not available | 5.5 months | |
| 28–48.5% | 5 months | 4.1–9 months |
Summary of clinical recommendations.
| Topic | Clinical Recommendations |
|---|---|
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All CSCC cases, including in situ lesions, should be included in cancer registries, with both tumor- and patient-related information, to ensure consistent collection of information and to facilitate analysis of data. To ensure homogeneity of data collection, all pathologists should adhere to the WHO classification of Skin Tumours 4th edition. CSCC should be considered as an occupational disease in a subset of outside workers at high risk of developing skin cancer and be recorded in specific registries to gain access to specific welfare benefits. |
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As of today, the impact of molecular and epigenetic characterization on prognosis and targeted treatments is not clear, and it should not be routinely performed in clinical practice, outside of translational studies. Subjects with more than three AKs and/or with a previous diagnosis of CSCC in situ should undergo dermatologic follow-up due to the high risk of developing an invasive CSCC. To date, molecular and epigenetic profiling of AKs is not recommended in everyday clinical practice, outside of translational studies. |
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Dermoscopy is a valuable tool for the differential diagnosis of skin lesions and should also be employed as an adjunct to visual inspection of a suspicious skin lesion following a thorough anamnesis, including assessment of risk factors for keratinocyte cancer and melanoma. Reflectance confocal microscopy may be employed in selected patients for the differential diagnosis of complex lesions, especially in the head and neck area. The following minimum clinical information should be recorded preoperatively and provided to the pathologist: age, sex, anatomic site, association with actinic keratosis (field cancerization), maximum tumor diameter (in mm, evaluated prior to surgery), primitive tumor or relapse, immunosuppression (specify: recipient of an organ transplant, previous diagnosis with chronic leukemia) and other comorbidities (previous RT, burns, chronic inflammation or scars, etc.), lifestyle (smoking, alcohol consumption), and skin specimen orientation/labeled margins if necessary. The following minimum information should be provided in the histology report by the pathologist: histotype (WHO 4th Edition, 2018); grade of differentiation; depth of invasion (the maximum vertical tumor thickness is measured in millimeters, from the granular layer of adjacent normal epidermis to the base of the tumor); Clark level of invasion; desmoplasia; perineural invasion (PNI); lymphovascular invasion (LVI); invasion of fascia, muscle, or bone; association with precursor lesions (actinic keratosis/actinic cheilitis) or de novo; HPV infection (only for selected sites); margin status; and AJCC TNM stage (8th Edition). Pathological margins should be reported as proposed by the Royal College of Pathologists (see |
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A CSCC may be defined as high-risk and should be managed in a multidisciplinary setting if one of the following conditions apply:
maximum tumor diameter > 20 mm or Breslow thickness > 6 mm or invasion beyond subcutaneous fat with or without any other risk factors; 1 patient-related + 1 tumor-related clinical/radiological + 1 tumor-related pathological risk factors; 3 or more tumor-related risk factors with or without patient-related risk factors. |
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The minimum clinical safety margins for low-risk CSCC should be at least 4 mm. The minimum clinical safety margins for high-risk CSCC should be at least 6 mm. Micrographically controlled surgery may be offered in case of high-risk or recurrent CSCC after a multidisciplinary discussion. In patients with a high number of AKs, a treatment on field cancerization may be indicated. A maintenance treatment with nicotinamide, polypodium, or photoliasis may be offered to patients after a treatment on field cancerization due to the high risk of relapse. A non-surgical treatment on field cancerization after surgery of CSCC of the head and neck area (or any other anatomical region with field cancerization) may be offered to reduce the risk of incidence of additional invasive tumors. SNLB is not recommended in everyday clinical practice; however, the procedure may be offered after multidisciplinary consultation in selected patients, preferably in the context of clinical studies. |
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The choice of imaging modality is related to the clinical context. In particular, ultrasound should be used in case of operable high-risk tumors without palpable nodes for the diagnosis of non-palpable lymph node metastases; CT scan and MRI should be employed to assess tumor extension in locally advanced tumors; whole body CT or PET/CT for locally advanced tumors to assess potential distant metastases. |
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In case of patients with primary CSCC who are not eligible for curative surgery, or when surgery is not a proper option due to inacceptable functional and aesthetic outcomes, definitive primary RT may be considered as a primary treatment after a careful multidisciplinary evaluation to assess the possibility of a systemic approach with anti-PD-1. Postoperative RT may be considered in case of positive margins if re-excision is not possible or contraindicated. Local adjuvant RT may be offered to patients with high-risk CSCC, particularly in the case of PNI. Regional adjuvant may be offered after surgical excision of regional metastases, particularly in the case of extra-capsular extension. |
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Treatment with cemiplimab should be offered to patients with CSCC when curative surgery or curative radiotherapy is not appropriated. Chemotherapy and/or cetuximab may be considered as second-line systemic treatments. For patients with CSCC and numerous risk factors, cemiplimab may be offered as a front-line treatment compared to surgery if it is anticipated, after a careful multidisciplinary evaluation, that it may achieve the highest chances of long-term outcomes. Patients with advanced CSCC and an autoimmune disease should be offered treatment with cemiplimab after a careful multidisciplinary assessment and a strict follow-up to detect possible exacerbation of the pre-existing autoimmune condition. Anti-PD-1 therapy may be offered to post-transplant patients with advanced CSCC if there is no valid alternative treatment, after a careful multidisciplinary assessment and with caution due to the risk of graft rejection. Treatment with cemiplimab should be offered to patients with advanced CSCC and HIV infection, after a careful multidisciplinary assessment and with a strict follow-up for possible effects on the viral control. Patients with advanced CSCC and chronic lymphocytic leukemia should be offered treatment with cemiplimab after a careful multidisciplinary assessment and a strict hematological follow-up. |
Abbreviations: AK: actinic keratosis; CSCC: cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma; CT: computed tomography; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; PET: proton emission tomography; PNI: perineural invasion; RT: radiotherapy SNLB: sentinel lymph node biopsy; WHO: World Health Organization.