AI Article Synopsis

  • Some cancer patients (1-10%) can develop skin growths called cutaneous metastases, which can be tricky to diagnose, especially if doctors don’t know where the original cancer started.
  • Researchers at a medical center looked at 152 cases of these skin metastases from 2007 to 2021 to understand them better.
  • The most common types of original cancers were breast and lung cancers for women, and gastrointestinal and lung cancers for men; sometimes, these skin growths were the first signs of hidden cancers inside the body.

Article Abstract

Aims: Cutaneous metastases of internal malignancies occur in 1-10% of cancer patients. The diagnosis can sometimes be challenging, especially in cases with an unknown primary cancer.

Materials And Methods: A retrospective case review was performed including all cases of skin metastases from primary internal malignancies diagnosed at the Department of Pathology at the Maastricht University Medical Centre+ from 2007 to 2021. The clinicopathological data were collected and immunohistochemical and molecular diagnostic tests were performed to confirm the primary origin of the metastases.

Results: We identified 152 cases (71 female; 31 male patients) of cutaneous metastases of internal malignancies. 28 patients (20 women and 8 men) were diagnosed with multiple cutaneous metastases. Among the female patients, the most common primary tumour was breast cancer (50% of the cases), followed by lung (13.6%), gynaecological (7.3%), and gastrointestinal origin (7.3%). Among the male patients, the most common primary sites were gastrointestinal and lung origin (altogether, 50% of the cases). In 19 patients, the cutaneous metastasis was the first presentation of a clinically silent internal malignancy (18.6%), of which most (78.9%) represented metastatic lung carcinomas. Finally, metastasizing patterns were different across tumour types and gender.

Conclusion: Breast, lung, gastrointestinal, and gynaecologic cancers are the most common primary tumours demonstrating skin metastases. Infrequently, cutaneous metastases can be the first clinically visual manifestation of an underlying not yet diagnosed internal malignancy; therefore, occasional broad immunohistochemical profiling, molecular clonal analysis, and a continuous high level of awareness are necessary for a precise diagnosis of cutaneous metastases of internal malignancies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9544513PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/his.14705DOI Listing

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