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Authoritative facts about the skin from the New Zealand Dermatological Society Incorporated.

Keratoacanthoma

A keratoacanthoma is a false skin cancer that looks like a little volcano.

A keratoacanthoma often starts at the site of a minor injury to sun damaged skin. At first it may appear as a small pimple or boil and may be squeezed but is found to have a solid core. It then grows rapidly and by the time it is brought to the attention of the doctor may be up to 2cm in diameter.

Keratoacanthoma Keratoacanthoma Keratoacanthoma
©R Suhonen
Keratoacanthoma

More images of keratoacanthoma ...

What causes keratoacanthoma?

Past sun exposure certainly plays a role. It appears that keratoacanthomas arise from a single hair follicle as they are only seen on hair-bearing skin, not on the palms, for instance. A minor injury seems to be required to trigger off a keratoacanthoma but this is often either not apparent or unremembered by the patient. Cells start multiplying in the hair follicle and the cell mass grows into a keratoacanthoma.

Some keratoacanthomas appear to be related to infection with human papilloma virus, the cause of warts.

Untreated, a true keratoacanthoma will go on growing for several months, reach a maximum size then self-destruct over several more months.

Unfortunately a keratoacanthoma can look exactly like a true skin cancer, a squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), or less commonly like a basal cell carcinoma (BCC).

Multiple keratoacanthomas

There are some rare conditions in which multiple keratoacanthomas appear. These are:

Management requires oral medications such as acitretin, methotrexate or cyclophosphamide.

Treatment

If you have a keratoacanthoma, seek the advice of your doctor, dermatologist or plastic surgeon.

Keratoacanthomas should be treated for several reasons. Firstly, it is not always possible to be sure the lesion is a keratoacanthoma and not a true skin cancer. A pathologist may report squamous cell carcinoma when the dermatologist has been fairly sure that the lesion is a keratoacanthoma. Secondly, the patient wishes to be rid of what is usually an unsightly, often tender and worrisome lesion as soon as possible. Finally, the scar which results from treating a keratoacanthoma is often better than if it is left to resolve spontaneously.

Follow-up

Normally there will be no further problem with a keratoacanthoma after treatment. Rarely, a recurrence will form, usually on the edge of the scar. In this case the lesion can be readily re-treated, usually by the same method.

Patients with keratoacanthomas are at risk of further similar lesions and other skin cancers; seek your doctor's help promptly if you develop any growing lumps or sores which fail to heal.

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If you have any concerns with your skin or its treatment, see a dermatologist for advice.