Fibroepithelioma of Pinkus
Pinkus tumour; FEP; premalignant fibroepithelial tumour of Pinkus; epithelioma adenoides cysticum (older term, distinct entity)
Fibroepithelioma of Pinkus is an uncommon distinctive variant of basal cell carcinoma with prominent fibroepithelial / adnexal differentiation, presenting as a solitary, smooth, dome-shaped, pink to skin-coloured papule or plaque most commonly on the lumbosacral back. Originally described by Hermann Pinkus in 1953 as a premalignant fibroepithelial tumour, it is now classified as a BCC variant in WHO 2018. Clinically it is frequently misdiagnosed as acrochordon, seborrhoeic keratosis, fibroma or naevus — the diagnosis is almost always made on histology after excision for diagnostic uncertainty or cosmetic concern. Indolent behaviour; complete surgical excision is curative.
Clinical features
- Solitary smooth, dome-shaped or pedunculated pink to skin-coloured papule or plaque, 5–20 mm.
- Common sites — lumbosacral back (~ 60%), trunk, occasionally extremities or genitalia.
- Median age 50–70; slight female predominance.
- Slow growth over months to years; usually asymptomatic.
- Lacks the characteristic pearly margin, telangiectasia and ulceration of typical BCC.
- Often clinically diagnosed as a skin tag, SK or banal pedunculated lesion until excision.
Histology
- Anastomosing thin strands and trabeculae of basaloid cells extending downwards from the epidermis, embedded in a fibromyxoid stroma — characteristic "fenestrated" / "interconnecting trabecular" pattern.
- Peripheral palisading and clefting between tumour cells and stroma — features of BCC.
- Adnexal / follicular differentiation may be present.
- Distinct from acrochordon (no basaloid trabeculae), seborrhoeic keratosis (squamoid keratinocytes), trichoblastoma (more lobular structure).
- Stromal myxoid change and frequent admixture with conventional BCC nests in some cases.
Management
- Complete surgical excision with conventional BCC margins (3–4 mm for low-risk sites).
- Mohs micrographic surgery rarely needed — most lesions are well-circumscribed at low-risk sites.
- Histology guides margin assessment; behaves indolently.
- Reassurance after complete excision; recurrence uncommon.
- Multiple lesions — consider Gorlin syndrome (rare); routine examination of the patient for other BCCs.
References
- Pinkus H. Premalignant fibroepithelial tumors of the skin. AMA Arch Derm Syphilol; 1953 (original).
- Sellheyer K, Krahl D. Fibroepithelioma of Pinkus — molecular study suggesting BCC variant rather than trichoblastic neoplasm. Br J Dermatol; 2012.
- WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board. Skin Tumours, WHO Classification of Tumours, 5th ed., vol. 12. Lyon: IARC; 2025.
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