Kim Yuhree, Feng Jessica, Su Katherine A, Asgari Maryam M
Department of Dermatology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, MA, United States.
Int J Womens Dermatol. 2020 May 27;6(4):286-289. doi: 10.1016/j.ijwd.2020.05.008. eCollection 2020 Sep.
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) is the second most common malignancy in the United States, and its incidence is increasing. Ultraviolet radiation is the main environmental risk factor for cSCCs; thus, they tend to arise on sun-exposed skin. Most publications cite the head and neck as the predominant location for cSCCs, but these papers do not account for the differential anatomic predication of cSCCs by sex. No prior studies have examined the differential distribution of cSCCs by sex, particularly invasive cSCCs that have the potential for recurrence and metastasis.
We examined the association between cSCC tumor features, including anatomic site and invasiveness, by key patient features, including age and sex.
Using an institutional cSCC registry, we identified 618 non-Hispanic white patients diagnosed with 2,111 histologically-confirmed cSCCs between 2000-2016.
We found differential anatomic distributions of cSCC by patient sex. Men were more likely to have cSCCs arise on the head and neck (51.7%), whereas women were more likely to have cSCCs develop on the lower extremity (41.2%). Stratification by dichotomized age (younger [<65 years] vs. older [≥65 years]) revealed that nearly half of invasive cSCCs (47.7%) among older women arose on the lower extremities, whereas approximately half of the invasive cSCCs (52.4%) arose on the head and neck among older men.
Lower extremities can be easily overlooked, particularly when practitioners perform waist-up-only skin examinations in time-limited settings. Understanding the anatomic predilection for invasive cSCCs by patient characteristics, including our findings, which suggest that the lower extremities are an important anatomic site for invasive cSCCs among women, can help further inform skin cancer screening and prevention efforts.
皮肤鳞状细胞癌(cSCC)是美国第二常见的恶性肿瘤,其发病率正在上升。紫外线辐射是cSCC的主要环境风险因素;因此,它们往往出现在阳光暴露的皮肤上。大多数出版物将头颈部列为cSCC的主要发病部位,但这些论文没有考虑cSCC在性别上的解剖学差异预测。此前没有研究探讨过cSCC在性别上的差异分布,特别是具有复发和转移潜力的浸润性cSCC。
我们通过年龄和性别等关键患者特征,研究了cSCC肿瘤特征(包括解剖部位和浸润性)之间的关联。
利用一个机构的cSCC登记系统,我们确定了618名非西班牙裔白人患者,他们在2000年至2016年间被诊断出患有2111例经组织学确诊的cSCC。
我们发现cSCC在患者性别上存在解剖学分布差异。男性的cSCC更有可能出现在头颈部(51.7%),而女性的cSCC更有可能出现在下肢(41.2%)。按二分年龄( younger [<65岁] 与 older [≥65岁])分层显示,老年女性中近一半(47.7%)的浸润性cSCC出现在下肢,而老年男性中约一半(52.4%)的浸润性cSCC出现在头颈部。
下肢很容易被忽视,尤其是当医生在时间有限的情况下仅进行上半身皮肤检查时。了解包括我们的研究结果在内的患者特征对浸润性cSCC的解剖学偏好,即下肢是女性浸润性cSCC的一个重要解剖部位,有助于为皮肤癌筛查和预防工作提供进一步的信息。