journal article Open Access Jul 20, 2022

Cutaneous metastases of internal malignancies: a single‐institution experience

Histopathology Vol. 81 No. 3 pp. 329-341 · Wiley
View at Publisher Save 10.1111/his.14705
Abstract
AimsCutaneous 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 methodsA 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.ResultsWe 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.ConclusionBreast, 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.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
32
[3]
Alter M "Cutaneous manifestations of internal malignancy" JDDG J. der Dtsch. Dermatologischen Gesellschaft (2020) 10.1111/ddg.14093
[11]
FEDERA.Human tissue and medical research: code of conduct for responsible use.2011;2011;1–83.
[13]
Skin involvement as the presenting sign of internal carcinoma

Donald P. Lookingbill, Nancy Spangler, F. Mack Sexton

Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 10.1016/0190-9622(90)70002-y
[17]
Casparie M "Pathology databanking and biobanking in The Netherlands, a central role for PALGA, the nationwide histopathology and cytopathology data network and archive" Cell. Oncol. (2007)
[22]
Siesling S "Fight against cancer in The Netherlands: current state of affairs" Ned. Tijdschr. Geneeskd. (2019)
[23]
Schnitt SJ (2017)
[29]
Fernández‐Antón Martínez MC "Cutaneous metastases of internal tumors" Actas Dermosifiliogr. (2013)
Cited By
20
Cutaneous metastases from solid neoplasms – Literature review

Bruno de Castro e Souza, Denis Miyashiro · 2023

Anais Brasileiros de Dermatologia
Metrics
20
Citations
32
References
Details
Published
Jul 20, 2022
Vol/Issue
81(3)
Pages
329-341
License
View
Funding
Universiteit Maastricht
Cite This Article
Astrid I P Vernemmen, Xiaofei Li, Guido M J M Roemen, et al. (2022). Cutaneous metastases of internal malignancies: a single‐institution experience. Histopathology, 81(3), 329-341. https://doi.org/10.1111/his.14705