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Dermatofibroma

Dermatofibroma are one of the most common benign skin tumours but frequently cause concern upon discovery.

Aetiology

Traditionally, dermatofibroma were attributed to a reactive reaction to trauma such as insect bites. However, the precise aetiology is unclear. They appear to be clonal proliferative growths of dermal dendritic histiocyte cells.

Epidemiology
  • More frequent in women than men (ratio of 4:1)
  • Can occur at any age, most commonly in young adulthood.
Visual appearance

Most commonly:

  • Solitary lesion on the lower limbs
  • Freely moving, firm to hard nodule of 0.5-1.0 cm diameter - feels like a small lentil under the skin surface
  • Tethering of overlying epidermis ('dimple' sign)
  • The skin's surface is generally smooth, occasionally scaly
  • Overlying skin colour varies from skin coloured to pink/red to cream/white to brown.

DERMATOFIBROMA - CLOSE UP (DIS26.jpg)

DERMATOFIBROMA - PINCH TEST (DIS31.jpg)

Presentation1
  • Usually a single nodule develops on an extremity, most commonly the lower legs.
  • Lesions can occur at any skin site and individuals may have several lesions (up to 15).
  • Multiple variants tend to occur where immunity is impaired (eg autoimmune disease, SLE, HIV, leukaemia).
  • The nodule is usually asymptomatic but can be itchy or tender.
  • After initial growth, they tend to remain static in size.
Diagnosis

Diagnosis is usually straightforward provided you palpate the lesion as few other skin lesions are as firm. The pinch test is helpful (but not definitive): squeezing the lesion from the sides results in dimpling of overlying skin (see image above). Excision biopsy is useful where diagnostic uncertainty remains after examination.

Differential Diagnosis1

Includes:

Primary Care Management
  • Reassure - generally no treatment is required.
  • Remove where cosmetically disliked, symptomatic or diagnostic uncertainty.
  • Removal by elliptical excision or punch biopsy usually most satisfactory: shave excision or cryotherapy risk incomplete excision and recurrence.
  • About 2% GP subcutis excisions yield unexpected or rare malignancies so even where excision is for cosmetic or symptomatic reasons, it is worth sending specimens to histology.3
Prognosis
  • Lesions are benign.
  • Most are static and persist indefinately although uncommonly they spontaneously regress.
  • They may become repeatedly irritated by shaving, for example.
When to Refer

Normally for diagnostic assistance to differentiate from other potentially harmful pigmented lesions.


Document References
  1. Pierson JC & Pierson DM, Dermatofibroma; eMedicine 2007
  2. Hanly AJ, Jorda M, Elgart GW, et al; High proliferative activity excludes dermatofibroma: report of the utility of MIB-1 in the differential diagnosis of selected fibrohistiocytic tumors. Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2006 Jun;130(6):831-4. [abstract]
  3. Buis PA, Verweij W, van Diest PJ; Value of histopathologic analysis of subcutis excisions by general practitioners. BMC Fam Pract. 2007 Jan 26;8:5. [abstract]

Internet and Further Reading Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Chloe Borton for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2007.
DocID: 4047
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp25979
Last Updated: 20 Mar 2007
Review Date: 19 Mar 2009








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PS - Health and Poverty

Perhaps the biggest cause of ill health in the world is poverty. Help to Make Poverty History. For example, why not lend some of your money to disadvantaged communities to enable them to trade their way out of poverty through schemes such as Shared Interest.

See also MAKEPOVERTYHISTORY North East for details and links to campaigns against poverty.

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