Basal cell carcinoma of the scrotum. A rare localization linked to a bad prognosis
2000
OBJECTIVE: To present a case of basal cell carcinoma of the scrotum. METHODS: In a review of 56 scrotal tumors, we found 4 primary neoplasias, 3 benign mesenchymal tumors and one malignant tumor, the basal cell carcinoma of the scrotum described herein. RESULTS: A 52-year-old patient with no remarkable urological or dermatological history, complained of an excrescence in the right hemiscrotum that he had noted for several years. A clinical diagnosis of basal cell carcinoma of the scrotum was made and the lesion was surgically excised. Pathological analysis of the surgical specimen confirmed the diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS: Basal cell carcinoma is the most common type of skin cancer in the middle-aged and elderly, but localization to the scrotum is rare. It is a tumor that grows locally and rarely metastasizes, although scrotal tumors are much more aggressive and patients should therefore be followed very closely after resection of the tumor.
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