Penile Cancer: Non-squamous Penile Cancer
- Non-squamous penile cancer is extremely rare
Basal cell carcinoma edit
- Frequently encountered on other sun-exposed cutaneous surfaces, it is rare on the penis
- Treatment is by local excision, which is virtually always curative
Melanoma edit
- Aggressive form of cancer but can be cured if diagnosed and treated with the appropriate surgical treatment at an early stage
- Surgery is the primary mode of treatment; radiation therapy and chemotherapy are of only adjunctive or palliative benefit
Sarcoma edit
- Prone to local recurrence; regional and distant metastases are rare.
- Superficial lesions can be treated with less radical procedures
Extramammary Paget Disease edit
- Appearance
- Erythematous, eczematoid, well-demarcated area
- Cannot be clinically distinguished from erythroplasia of Queyrat, Bowen disease, or carcinoma in situ of the penis
- See Figure
- Clinical presentation
- Local discomfort, pruritus, and occasionally a serosanguineous discharge involving the penis, the scrotum, or even the perianal area
- Behaves as a slow-growing intraepithelial adenocarcinoma
- With time the cells may become invasive with dermal tumor deposits metastasizing to regional lymph nodes via dermal lymphatics penoscrotal
- May be associated with other malignancies of the genitourinary tract, such as prostate, bladder, and renal malignancies and should be evaluated for their presence
- Management
- In most cases, only the skin and dermis must be resected with a gross margin of up to 3 cm. Positive margins may still occur, and frozen sections are recommended to guide the extent of resection.
- Patients with a positive surgical margin are at a higher risk for recurrence, and additional resection is advised
- Local skin or scrotal flaps can be used to cover the defects.
- In a minority of cases the tumor may invade deeper structures, necessitating more extensive resection and reconstruction
- If inguinal adenopathy is present, radical node dissection is advised but prognosis is poor
- In most cases, only the skin and dermis must be resected with a gross margin of up to 3 cm. Positive margins may still occur, and frozen sections are recommended to guide the extent of resection.
Adenosquamous carcinoma edit
Lymphoreticular malignant neoplasm edit
Metastases edit
- Most often represent spread from a clinically obvious existing primary tumor.
- Prognosis is poor, and therapy should be directed toward the primary tumor site histology and local palliation
- Priapism is the most frequently encountered sign of metastatic involvement of the penis
Lymphomatous infiltration of the penis is most likely secondary to diffuse disease
References edit
- Wein AJ, Kavoussi LR, Partin AW, Peters CA (eds): CAMPBELL-WALSH UROLOGY, ed 11. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2015