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Correspondence
37 (
4
); 234-235
doi:
10.25259/NMJI_550_2024

Malignant transformation in giant sebaceous cysts: Uncommon but not impossible

Department of Surgery, NRS Medical College, Acharya Jagdish Chandra Bose Road, Sealdah, Raja Bazar, Kolkata, West Bengal, India
Licence
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

[To cite: Kumar D, Reza MS, Ansari R, De U. Malignant transformation in giant sebaceous cysts: Uncommon but not impossible (Correspondence). Natl Med J India 2024;37:234–5. DOI: 10.25259/NMJI_550_2024]

Sebaceous carcinoma (SC) is an infrequent yet potentially aggressive ailment.1 While sebaceous cyst, a prevalent non-malignant growth, seldom evolves into malignancy, they can progress to SC.1,2 The diagnostic process entails a biopsy, and the recommended treatment is excision.

A 57-year-old farmer presented with a large ulcerated swelling at the nape of his neck. Initially pea-sized for 20 years, the swelling occasionally discharged malodorous fluid and was diagnosed as a sebaceous cyst. Despite a surgical recommendation, the patient opted for homeopathic treatment. Recently, the swelling rapidly increased in size with ulceration, and bleeding. The patient, known to have diabetes and on oral hypoglycaemic drugs and a chronic smoker, had normal bladder and bowel habits. Examination showed a 10 cm×9 cm ovoid, non-tender, partially mobile swelling with ulceration and bleeding, fixed to the underlying scalp. A provisional diagnosis of soft tissue sarcoma was considered. Haematological parameters were normal, and HbA1C was 6.5%. MRI revealed a large heterogeneous lesion in the occipital subcutaneous tissue, while MRI of the brain was unremarkable. An incisional biopsy confirmed SC. Treatment involved wide local excision and reconstruction with a trapezius myocutaneous flap. The patient was discharged on postoperative day 10 with tumour-free margins and referred to oncology.

SC are common, benign, intradermal or subcutaneous dermatological lesions that grow slowly.1 Approximately 25% of SCs occur on the scalp, affecting men and women equally.1,3 Malignant transformation is rare, occurring in 1.1% to 9.2% of cases.2 Squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma, and Merkel cell carcinoma can develop within SCs. The risk of malignant transformation increases with age. Symptoms such as pain, ulceration, and increase in size may indicate malignancy.4 SC can mimic benign conditions such as pyogenic granuloma or molluscum contagiosum and other non-melanoma skin cancers.35 Although CT, PET-CT and MRI are used, there is no standardized imaging or staging guideline for SC.24 Imaging is generally unnecessary unless the tumour is locally advanced. X-rays can reveal bony destruction, and MRI can delineate soft tissue involvement. Imaging for regional or distant disease should be symptom-driven. Biopsy is essential for diagnosis.

The treatment for carcinomas arising from sebaceous cysts involves wide excision. Metastasis is rare but can occur via direct extension, lymphatic spread or haematogenous route, with rates between 14% and 28% and cancer-specific mortality between 18% and 30%.3-–6 With adequate wide excision, the prognosis is generally good. Five-year observed and relative survival rates are 78.2% and 92.7%, respectively, while 10-year rates are 61.7% and 86.9%.5,6

Conflicts of interest

None declared

References

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