Regressing basal-cell carcinoma masquerading as benign lichenoid keratosis

Regressing basal-cell carcinoma masquerading as benign lichenoid keratosis

Authors

  • Aleksandra Kulberg Department of Dermatology, Venerology, and Allergology, Klinikum Hildesheim, Germany
  • Wolfgang Weyers Center for Dermatopathology, Freiburg, Germany

Keywords:

Basal-cell carcinoma, benign lichenoid keratosis, lichen planus-like keratosis.

Abstract

Background: Benign lichenoid keratosis (BLK, LPLK) is often misdiagnosed clinically as superficial basal-cell carcinoma (BCC), especially when occurring on the trunk. However, BCCs undergoing regression may be associated with a lichenoid interface dermatitis that may be misinterpreted as BLK in histopathologic sections.

Methods: In order to assess the frequency of remnants of BCC in lesions interpreted as BLK, we performed step sections on 100 lesions from the trunk of male patients that had been diagnosed as BLK.

Results: Deeper sections revealed remnants of superficial BCC in five and remnants of a melanocytic nevus in two specimens. In the original sections of cases in which a BCC showed up, crusts tended to be more common, whereas vacuolar changes at the dermo-epidermal junction and melanophages in the papillary dermis tended to be less common and less pronounced.

Conclusions: Lesions from the trunk submitted as BCC and presenting histopathologically as a lichenoid interface dermatitis are not always BLKs. Although no confident recommendations can be given on the basis of this limited study, deeper sections may be warranted if lesions are crusted and/or associated with only minimal vacuolar changes at the dermo-epidermal junction and no or few melanophages in the papillary dermis.

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Published

2016-10-31

Issue

Section

Research

How to Cite

1.
Kulberg A, Weyers W. Regressing basal-cell carcinoma masquerading as benign lichenoid keratosis. Dermatol Pract Concept. Published online October 31, 2016:13-18. doi:10.5826/dpc.0604a03

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