Penile cancer
Penile cancer (cancer of the penis) is relatively rare. It's more common in elderly and in developing countries. In almost all cases penile cancer is squamous cell carcinoma.
Etiology
- HPV
- Poor hygiene
- Phimosis
- Chronic balanitis
Precancerous lesions
- Bowen disease
- Erythroplasia of Queyrat
Clinical features
- Most commonly in the glans
- Painless lump or ulcerative lesion on penis
- Swollen inguinal lymph node
Diagnosis
- Histological diagnosis
- Excisional biopsy
- Gold standard
Differential
- Condyloma acuminata
- STD
Treatment
- Partial penectomy
- If penile length is adequate after surgical excision with a 2 cm margin
- Total penectomy
- A urethrostomy is made on the perineum
- T1 tumour
- Hasn’t invaded any of the corpora
- Surgical excision, laser ablation, radiotherapy
- T2 – T4 or N+ tumour
- Partial or total penectomy
- Ipsilateral lymph node dissection (if N+)
- Adjuvant chemotherapy
- Metastatic disease
- Palliative chemotherapy