Several days into her hospitalization, the patient developed radicular pain in both arms and weakness in all 4 extremities. A CT scan of the neck revealed a pathologic fracture of the C7 vertebrae. Several medical and surgical services as well as psychiatry were consulted. Given the extensive nature of the disease involvement with limited treatment options, the patient sought to forego further interventions and was discharged to hospice care.
Basal cell carcinomas rarely metastasize, with a reported incidence of 0.0028% to 0.5%.1 The likelihood of metastasis is most closely related to tumor size and depth of invasion. Tumors greater than 3 cm in diameter have a 2% incidence of metastatic spread and/or death. The incidence of metastatic spread and/or death is estimated to be 25% for tumors with a diameter of 5 cm and 50% for tumors with a diameter of 10 cm or greater.2 Other risk factors for metastatic spread include long duration of disease, failure to respond to conventional treatment, and prior radiation treatment in the affected area.1 In one review, the median interval between onset of BCC and metastasis was 9 years.3 In our case, 15 years of neglect most likely led to the aggressiveness of the tumor. Although the workup in our patient was limited per her request, there was no evidence that her lymphoma had recurred or that she was in any other way immunocompromised. Unfortunately, in this patient’s case, the local destructiveness of the carcinoma with subsequent bony invasion and necrosis was complicated with secondary Rhizopus infection. A PubMed search of articles indexed for MEDLINE using the terms basal cell carcinoma and mucormycosis revealed no other reported cases of BCC associated with mucormycosis; therefore, our case represents a rare presentation of this association. Rhinocerebral mucormycosis is the most common manifestation of mucormycosis and more commonly occurs in diabetics with ketoacidosis and in severely debilitated or immunosuppressed individuals.4 The extensive bony destruction, especially of the nasal region, of our patient’s tumor likely led to secondary infection with Rhizopus.
Approximately 85% of all metastatic BCCs originate in the head and neck region, with lymph nodes being the first site of metastasis and involved in approximately half of all cases.1,4 Metastases to the lungs, bone, liver, and other viscera can occur with advanced disease. Metastasis generally portends a poor prognosis, with survival rarely exceeding 1.5 years. Until recently, therapeutic options for metastatic disease were limited, with marginal response to chemotherapy with methotrexate, fluorouracil, bleomycin, and cisplatin.4 Vismodegib, a novel smoothened receptor inhibitor that blocks the sonic hedgehog pathway implicated in BCC carcinogenesis, offers a new promising treatment for management and control of advanced disease.5