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DERMCLINIC 

Basal Cell Carcinoma at a Site Not Exposed to Sun

By Ted Rosen, MD | August 16, 2012
Dr Rosen is Professor of Dermatology at Baylor College of Medicine and Chief of the Dermatology Service at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, both in Houston, Texas.

Although this lesion is NOT in a sun-exposed skin site, the clinical features are typical for a basal cell carcinoma. This presumptive diagnosis was verified by biopsy.

A 53-year-old woman was told by her hairdresser to have a dermatologist look at the 1.3-cm diameter, painless nodule behind her left ear. The nodule had never bled. The patient was ostensibly in good health.

Key point: The nodule appears somewhat translucent, and coarse telangiectases are seen traversing the lesion’s surface. Despite the fact that this lesion is NOT in a sun-exposed skin site, the clinical features are typical for a basal cell carcinoma. This presumptive diagnosis was verified by biopsy. A solitary cutaneous metastasis from an internal malignancy was considered in the differential diagnosis.

Treatment: The neoplasm was removed by excision, and the defect closed by developing a flap.

Note: Non-melanoma cutaneous cancers may arise in relatively sun-protected sites.

 

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