Abstract

Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) is the second most common skin cancer, accounting for 20% of malignant skin tumors. Dermoscopy is a very useful tool for diagnosing cSCC, and its findings are confirmed through histopathological studies. to describe the different dermoscopic structures of invasive cSCC and investigate their association with the clinical form and histopathological grade of differentiation. We conducted a cross-sectional study, collecting all patients diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma over a period of 5 years. The study population was divided into two groups based on histological differentiation (well-differentiated and non-well-differentiated) and clinical form ( nodulo-ulcerative and nodular). Various dermoscopic parameters were compared between these groups. Out of 72 invasive cSCC, 81.9% were well-differentiated, while 18.1% were non-well-differentiated. The clinical form of cSCC was nodulo-ulcerative in 83.3% of cases and nodular in 16.7%. Well-differentiated tumors showed dotted, glomerular and hairpin vessels, along with a predominant white pattern characterized by centrally distributed keratin as well as white circles, and whitish perivascular halo (P < 0.05). The distribution of these white structures was radial in nodulo-ulcerarive lesions, whereas in nodular lesions, their distribution, as well as that of keratin, was more diffuse (P < 0.05). Non-well-differentiated tumors showed a combined white-red pattern with the predominance of arborizing vessels (P < 0.05). Our results show the reliability of dermoscopy as a tool for distinguishing between well- and poorly differentiated cSCC. This distinction is characterized by an increase in predominantly arborizing vessels and a corresponding decrease in white structures as the tumor progresses from a well-differentiated to a poorly differentiated state. Additionally, the nodulo-ulcerative form exhibits a central distribution of keratin, while the nodular form displays a diffuse distribution.

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