• Br. J. Dermatol. · Jun 1999

    Comparative Study

    Squamous cell carcinoma complicating chronic venous leg ulceration: a study of the histopathology, course and survival in 25 patients.

    • B T Baldursson, M A Hedblad, H Beitner, and B Lindelöf.
    • Department of Dermatology, Gävle Hospital, 801 87 Gävle, Sweden. baldur.baldursson@lsgs.lg.se
    • Br. J. Dermatol. 1999 Jun 1; 140 (6): 1148-52.

    AbstractWe have studied 25 cases of squamous cell carcinoma in chronic venous leg ulcers. Twenty-three of the patients were dead and two were alive. The mean age at cancer diagnosis was 78.5 years. The median survival was 1 year. Eleven tumours were well-differentiated, 10 moderately and four poorly. All patients with a poorly differentiated tumour died within a year. Metastases were certain in eight cases. The disease was lethal in 10 cases which included all poorly differentiated tumours. The survival of the study group was significantly shortened compared with a control group of patients with lower limb non-melanoma skin cancer (n = 433) from the Swedish Cancer Registry (P = 0.0084). When diagnosed, squamous cell carcinoma in chronic leg ulcers merits a thorough investigation of the degree of differentiation and spread. Assertive treatment is indicated as poorly differentiated tumours and some moderately differentiated tumours may be fatal.

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