Actinic Keratosis - The Sun's Rough Draft

- Etiology: Chronic UV radiation exposure leading to DNA damage in keratinocytes.
- Presentation: Small, rough, scaly, erythematous papules or plaques. Often described as feeling like "sandpaper."
- Location: Sun-exposed areas like the face, bald scalp, ears, and dorsal hands.
- Histopathology: Basal layer atypia with hyperkeratosis and parakeratosis. Dermis shows solar elastosis.
- Progression: Premalignant lesion with a low but definite risk of transformation into invasive squamous cell carcinoma (SCC).
⭐ The cumulative risk of an individual with multiple actinic keratoses developing an SCC is significantly higher than the risk from a single lesion.
Squamous Cell Carcinoma In Situ - The Confined Cancer
Also known as Bowen's disease, this represents full-thickness epidermal dysplasia without basement membrane invasion. It is a precursor to invasive squamous cell carcinoma (SCC).
- Etiology:
- UV light exposure (most common)
- Human Papillomavirus (HPV), esp. types 16, 18
- Immunosuppression
- Chronic arsenic exposure
- Clinical Features:
- Well-demarcated, erythematous, scaly patch or plaque.
- Can occur on sun-exposed or non-sun-exposed skin.

⭐ On the glans penis or vulva, it is termed Erythroplasia of Queyrat and is strongly associated with HPV.
Dysplastic Nevus - The Rogue Mole
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An atypical mole; a key precursor and risk marker for malignant melanoma. Assessed clinically using the 📌 ABCDE criteria: Asymmetry, irregular Borders, Color variegation, Diameter > 6 mm, and Evolution.
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Histo: Features architectural disorder (asymmetry, rete ridge bridging) and cytologic atypia (irregular, hyperchromatic nuclei, nuclear enlargement). Lamellar fibroplasia is common.
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Genetics: Associated with germline mutations in the CDKN2A gene on chromosome 9p21, particularly in Familial Atypical Mole and Melanoma (FAMM) syndrome.
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Management: Biopsy suspicious lesions. Regular, lifelong skin surveillance is crucial for high-risk individuals.
⭐ The presence of multiple dysplastic nevi (>5) can increase the relative risk of developing melanoma by more than 10-fold compared to the general population.
Lentigo Maligna - The Slow Shadow

- A specific subtype of melanoma in situ.
- Epidemiology: Typically affects the elderly on chronically sun-damaged skin, especially the face, ears, and neck.
- Clinical: Presents as a large, slowly enlarging, flat macule (patch) with irregular borders and variable pigmentation (tan to black).
- Histology: Shows a proliferation of atypical melanocytes confined to the basal layer of the epidermis, often with adnexal extension.
- Progression: Has a low but definite risk (~5%) of evolving into invasive lentigo maligna melanoma over decades.
⭐ High-Yield: Characterized by a prolonged radial (horizontal) growth phase, often lasting for years to decades, before any potential vertical invasion into the dermis.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Actinic keratosis is the most common precursor to squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), feeling like sandpaper on sun-exposed skin.
- Bowen's disease is SCC in situ, defined by full-thickness epidermal atypia without dermal invasion.
- Keratoacanthoma, a rapidly-growing crateriform nodule, is treated as well-differentiated SCC despite potential regression.
- Dysplastic nevi are atypical moles indicating increased lifetime risk for malignant melanoma.
- Lentigo maligna is melanoma in situ, presenting as a flat macule on sun-damaged skin.
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