of a highly differentiated squamous-cell carcinoma of the mouth. Typical squamous-cell carcinoma cells are large with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm and large, often vesicular, nuclei.
Haematoxylin & eosin stain of squamous-cell carcinoma, keratinizing variant, with typical features. Pap stain. as well (which, however, tends to have fine chromatin).
Medical history,
physical examination and
medical imaging may suggest a squamous-cell carcinoma, but a
biopsy for
histopathology generally establishes the diagnosis.
TP63 staining is the main histological marker for squamous-cell carcinoma. In addition, TP63 is an essential transcription factor to establish the identity of the squamous cells. File:Squamous Cell Carcinoma well differentiated Left upper paraspinal back with adjacent actinic keratosis.jpg|SCC well-differentiated, left upper paraspinal back marked for biopsy with adjacent actinic keratosis File:Squamous Cell Carcinoma Left Lateral Canthus.jpg|SCC, left lateral canthus marked for biopsy File:Squamous Cell Carcinoma Left Ventral Forearm.jpg|SCC, left ventral forearm
Classification Cancer can be considered a very large and exceptionally heterogeneous family of malignant diseases, with squamous-cell carcinomas comprising one of the largest subsets. All SCC lesions are thought to begin via the repeated, uncontrolled division of cancer
stem cells of epithelial lineage or characteristics. SCCs arise from
squamous cells, which are flat cells that line many areas of the body. Some of which are keratinocytes. Accumulation of these cancer cells causes a microscopic focus of abnormal cells that are, at least initially, locally confined within the specific tissue in which the progenitor cell resided. This condition is called squamous-cell
carcinoma in situ, and it is diagnosed when the tumor has not yet penetrated the
basement membrane or other delimiting structure to invade adjacent tissues. Once the lesion has grown and progressed to the point where it has breached, penetrated, and infiltrated adjacent structures, it is referred to as "
invasive" squamous-cell carcinoma. Once a carcinoma becomes invasive, it can spread to other organs and cause the formation of a
metastasis, or "secondary tumor".
Other histopathologic subtypes •
Erythroplasia of Queyrat •
Marjolin's ulcer is a type of SCC that arises from a nonhealing
ulcer or burn wound. More recent evidence, however, suggests that genetic differences exist between SCC and
Marjolin's ulcer, which were previously underappreciated. One method of classifying squamous-cell carcinomas is by their
appearance under microscope. Subtypes may include: • adenoid squamous-cell carcinoma (also known as pseudoglandular squamous-cell carcinoma) is characterized by a tubular microscopic pattern and
keratinocyte acantholysis. • basaloid squamous-cell carcinoma is mostly found in or near the tongue, tonsils, or larynx, but may also occur
in the lung or elsewhere. • clear-cell squamous-cell carcinoma (also known as clear-cell carcinoma of the skin) is characterized by keratinocytes that appear clear as a result of
hydropic swelling. • signet ring-cell squamous-cell carcinoma (occasionally rendered as signet ring-cell squamous-cell carcinoma) is a histological variant characterized by concentric rings composed of keratin and large
vacuoles corresponding to markedly dilated
endoplasmic reticulum. These vacuoles grow to such an extent that they radically displace the
cell nucleus toward the cell membrane, giving the cell a distinctive superficial resemblance to a "signet ring" when viewed under a microscope. File:SkinTumors-P6070232.JPG|Adenoid squamous-cell carcinoma File:SkinTumors-P6020140.JPG|Basaloid squamous-cell carcinoma File:SkinTumors-P5290109.JPG|Clear-cell squamous-cell carcinoma File:SkinTumors-P5300131.JPG|Spindle-cell squamous-cell carcinoma ==Prevention==