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A 55-year-old man requests removal of multiple skin tags around his neck. He is overweight and has diabetes and acanthosis nigricans. Although some of his skin tags occasionally get caught on his clothing, he just doesn't like the way they look. The patient chose to have many of them removed by the snip excision method.
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Skin tags (acrochordons) are flesh-colored, pedunculated lesions that tend to occur in areas of skin folds, especially around the neck and in the axillae.
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In an unselected population study, skin tags were found in 46% of adults, particularly in persons who were obese.1
Skin tags increase in frequency through the fifth decade of life so that as many as 59% of individuals have them by the time they are 70 years old; however, the increase slows after age 50 years.1
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ETIOLOGY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
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Three types of skin tags are described1:
Small, furrowed papules of approximately 1 to 2 mm in width and height, located mostly on the neck and the axillae (Figure 163-1).
Single or multiple filiform lesions of approximately 2 mm in width and 5 mm in length occurring elsewhere on the body (Figure 163-2).
Large, pedunculated tumor or nevoid, baglike, soft fibromas that occur on the lower part of the trunk (Figure 163-3).
Etiology is unknown, but it is theorized that skin tags occur in localized areas with a paucity of elastic tissue resulting in sessile or atrophic lesions. In addition, hormone imbalances appear to facilitate their development (e.g., high levels of estrogen and progesterone seen during pregnancy) and other factors including epidermal growth factor, tissue growth factor-α, and infection have been implicated as cofactors.
Mast cells were found in higher density in skin tags than in normal skin in one study, suggesting a possible role in promoting fibrosis and skin tag development.2
Acrochordons also appear to be associated with impaired carbohydrate metabolism and diabetes3 (see Figure 163-1), as well as colon polyps (odds ratio [OR] 7.07).4
Very rarely, neoplasms are found at the base of skin tags. In a study of consecutive cutaneous pathology reports, 5 of 1335 clinically diagnosed fibroepithelial polyp specimens were malignant (i.e., 4 were basal cell carcinomas and 1 was squamous cell carcinoma in situ).5 There is a large selection bias in this study because most skin tags are not sent to the pathologist (nor should they be sent unless there is a suspicious feature).
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