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Apex Nursing

Chart — Med-Surg

Skin Cancer Comparison Chart

Three skin cancers, very different stakes. Two are common and mostly local; melanoma is the one that spreads and kills. Appearance and metastatic risk are what separate them.

Educational use only. Appearance varies and biopsy confirms the diagnosis. Any new, changing, or non-healing lesion warrants dermatology evaluation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Three Side by Side

FeatureBasal cell (BCC)Squamous cell (SCC)Melanoma
FrequencyMost common skin cancerSecond most commonLess common but deadliest
AppearancePearly, translucent papule with rolled borders, telangiectasias; may ulcerateScaly, crusted, or ulcerated firm red lesion/noduleNew/changing pigmented lesion; ABCDE features; 'ugly duckling'
Common locationSun-exposed — face, nose, earsSun-exposed — face, ears, lips, dorsal handsAnywhere — back, legs; also acral (palms/soles/nails) and mucosa
Growth / spreadSlow; rarely metastasizes (locally destructive)Can metastasize, esp. immunosuppressedCan metastasize EARLY and widely; depth (Breslow) drives prognosis
Key risk factorsCumulative UV, fair skinCumulative UV, immunosuppression, HPV, chronic woundsIntense/intermittent UV & sunburns, many/atypical moles, family history
TreatmentExcision, Mohs surgery, topical for superficialExcision, Mohs; radiation; check nodes if high-riskWide excision + sentinel node biopsy; immunotherapy/targeted for advanced

Exam Traps

  • Pearly papule with rolled borders + telangiectasias = BCC (most common, rarely spreads).
  • Scaly/ulcerated lesion on sun-exposed skin or lip = SCC (can metastasize, esp. immunosuppressed).
  • New/changing pigmented lesion with ABCDE features = melanoma (deadliest; spreads early).
  • Suspected melanoma = excisional (full-thickness) biopsy to measure Breslow depth.
  • UV exposure is the main modifiable risk for all three; transplant patients have very high SCC risk.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses (AMSN) · Current medical-surgical nursing standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →