My wife is 39 and four months pregnant with twins. She is Eurasian and lived most of her early life in Southeast Asia where she had tremendous
sunActinic keratosis
Fontanelles - sunken
Liver spots
Sun protection
Sunburn
Sunburn first aid
Sunken fontanelles (superior view) exposure.
About 7 years ago she saw a dermatologist in L.A. about two areas on her abdomen. He looked at both and only biopsied one, which turned out to be the coincidence of a wart and
benignBenign ear cyst or tumor
Benign positional vertigo moleBirthmarks - pigmented
Gestational trophoblastic disease
Hydatidiform mole
Pth.
The other area, which was about a 1/2 inch area of eczema looking skin he thought nothing of and did not biopsy. Now, 7 years later, I noticed the area getting a
littleLittle noses decongestant
Little tummys larger and it had started to itch so much my wife scratched it until it bled/scabbed. She went to a new dermatologist who biopsied it and it came back positive for
BasalBasal cell carcinoma
Basal cell carcinoma - close-up
Basal cell carcinoma - face
Basal cell carcinoma - nose
Basal ganglia dysfunction
Skin cancer, basal cell carcinoma - behind ear
Skin cancer, basal cell carcinoma - nose
Skin cancer, basal cell carcinoma - pigmented
Skin cancer, basal cell carcinoma - spreading Cell Carcinoma.
Here are my questions:
1) Is is possible that it was NOT BCC 7 years ago when the
firstFirst progesterone mc10
First progesterone mc5
First-progesterone vgs 100
First-progesterone vgs 200
First-progesterone vgs 25
First-progesterone vgs 400
First-progesterone vgs 50
First-testosterone
First-testosterone mc Dr. looked at it, and has only recently become cancerous?
2) The plan is to have it removed with local anesthetic in about four weeks. My wife, who is otherwise very healthy and concerned about the pregnancy, wonders if she could leave the removal until after birth, sometime in March 04. What would the risks be of doing that? One Dr. has said she could wait until March, another said it doesn't matter, and the Dermatologist made it clear he wants the thing off as soon as possible.
3) Does BCC ever become more serious or life threatening than the superficial presence she seems to have now? Presumably when they remove the whole thing it will be re-biopsied to make sure the margins are clear. Will they be looking for anything else? Are their different types of BCCs? Does depth make a difference, like it does with melanomas?
4) What are the recurrence statistics on BCC? How vigilant will she need to be after all this. (She's been out of the sun for about 10 years now, ironically.)
5) It seems to be in an odd place for BCC - around the bikini line. Aren't most BCCs in older men and on areas like the face or arms?
6) The changes occured after she became pregnant. Do hormonal changes during pregnancy exacerbate these skin cancers?
I am just generally worried. These will be our first children. My wife has never smoked, drank, or done anything harmful to her body (except childhood sun exposure) so it seems like a cruel blow to have to deal with this during pregancy.
Thanks in advance for any advice, answers, etc.
Thanks very much for your reassuring comments.
bwm1