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    Dermatology

    Skin Cancer Comparison: BCC vs SCC vs Melanoma – High-Yield Guide

    Dr BenBy Dr BenSeptember 2, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read

    BCC vs SCC vs Melanoma

    Feature Basal Cell Carcinoma (BCC) Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) Malignant Melanoma
    Origin Basal cells of epidermis Keratinocytes of epidermis Melanocytes
    Incidence Most common skin cancer Second most common Less common but most deadly
    Malignant Potential Rarely metastasizes Low–moderate metastatic risk High metastatic potential
    Growth Slow-growing, locally invasive Faster-growing, may invade locally Variable; often rapid vertical growth (nodular type)
    Common Sites Sun-exposed: nose, eyelids, cheeks Sun-exposed: face, ears, scalp, lips Men: back; Women: legs; face/arms also
    Appearance Pearly, translucent nodule; telangiectasia; central ulcer “rodent ulcer” Scaly, keratotic, firm nodule; may ulcerate; cutaneous horn Pigmented lesion; ABCDE: asymmetry, border irregularity, colour variegation, diameter >6mm, evolution
    Variants Nodular, superficial, morpheaform Keratoacanthoma, invasive SCC Superficial spreading, nodular, lentigo maligna, acral lentiginous
    Metastasis Risk Very low Low (high-risk sites: lip, ear, immunosuppressed) High; common to lymph nodes, lung, liver, brain
    Investigations Usually clinical; biopsy if uncertain Clinical + biopsy; imaging if high-risk Excisional biopsy; Breslow thickness, sentinel node, imaging if metastasis suspected
    Management Surgical excision (Mohs for high-risk); topical for superficial lesions Surgical excision (Mohs for high-risk); radiotherapy if inoperable Wide local excision; sentinel node biopsy; systemic therapy (immunotherapy, targeted therapy)
    Prognosis Excellent if treated Good if treated; depends on depth/site Variable; poor if advanced/metastatic

    PLAB Tips for Skin Cancer Questions

    1. BCC:
      • Most common; slow-growing, pearly, translucent with telangiectasia.
      • Rarely metastasizes; think local tissue destruction.
      • Mohs surgery = high-risk facial sites.
    2. SCC:
      • Faster-growing than BCC; scaly, keratotic, ulcerates easily.
      • Higher risk of metastasis than BCC, especially on lip, ear, or immunosuppressed.
      • Pre-malignant lesions: actinic keratosis, Bowen’s disease.
    3. Melanoma:
      • Most deadly; high metastatic potential.
      • Use ABCDE criteria and assess lesion evolution.
      • Early excision crucial; Breslow thickness predicts prognosis.
      • Sentinel lymph node biopsy for intermediate/high-risk lesions.
    4. Exam Trick Questions:
      • Lesion on lip → SCC more likely, but melanoma must also be considered.
      • Pearly papule with telangiectasia → BCC classic.
      • Changing pigmented lesion → think melanoma urgently.
    5. High-Yield Mnemonic for PLAB:
      • “BCC = Pearly & Pretty, SCC = Scaly & Serious, Melanoma = Malignant & Metastatic”
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