Dermatology Practical & Conceptual (Oct 2017)

Collision skin lesions—results of a multicenter study of the International Dermoscopy Society (IDS)

  • Andreas Blum,
  • Graeme Siggs,
  • Ashfaq A. Marghoob,
  • Jürgen Kreusch,
  • Horacio Cabo,
  • Gabriella Campos-do-Carmo,
  • Ana Flávia Cavalcanti Shiraishi,
  • Alexander Kienitz,
  • Cayetana Maldonado-Seral,
  • Paola Maltagliati-Holzner,
  • Zeljko P. Mijuskovic,
  • Andrea Miyuki Yoshimura,
  • Elvira Moscarella,
  • Harold Rabinovitz,
  • Cristina Rodriguez-Garcia,
  • Sonia Rodríguez Saa,
  • Pietro Rubegni,
  • Francesco Savoia,
  • Olga Simionescu,
  • Pedro Zaballos Diego,
  • Rainer Hofmann-Wellenhof

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5826/dpc.0704a12
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4

Abstract

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Background: Collision lesions as two independent and unrelated skin tumors often manifest an atypical morphology. Objective: To determine the combinations of collision skin lesions (CSLs). Methods: Twenty-one pigmented lesion clinics in nine countries included 77 histopathologically proven CSLs in this retrospective observational study. Results: Seventy-seven CSLs from 75 patients (median age 59.8 years) were analyzed; 24.7% of CSLs were located on the head and neck area, 5.2% on the upper extremities, 48.1% on the trunk, and 11.7% on the lower extremities; 40.3% revealed a melanocytic component (median age 54.7 years), followed by 45.5% with a basal cell carcinoma (BCC) (median age 62.4 years) and 11.7% with a seborrheic keratosis (median age 64.7 years). CSLs with a BCC component were more often found on the head and neck area compared to tumors with a melanocytic component (34.3% versus 16.1%). Lesions with a melanocytic component were more often detected on the trunk compared to lesions with a BCC (64.5% versus 37.1%). Patients with CSLs with epidermal-epidermal cell combination were older than patients with epidermal-dermal cell combination (63 versus 55.2 years), were more often male than female (63% versus 43.3%), more often had the lesion on the head and neck area (32.6% versus 13.3%), and less often on the upper (2.2 % versus 10%) or lower extremities (8.7% versus 16.6%). Conclusions: CSLs consist of a heterogeneous group of lesions of varying cell types. They are associated with advancing age and cumulative UV-exposure. CSLs manifest a complex morphology making it challenging to diagnose correctly.

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