How is squamous cell carcinoma treated?


Healing with compassion, caring with dedication.
Squamous cell carcinoma is divided into four grades: grade 1 squamous cell carcinoma, generally no metastasis. Grade 2 squamous cell carcinoma, cancer tissue down to the dermis, atypical squamous cell carcinoma, about 25%-50% more than grade 1. Grade 3 squamous cell carcinoma, there are a large number of atypical squamous cells, about 50%-70%, the keratinization is not obvious, no cancer beads. Grade 4 squamous cell carcinoma, almost the entire cancer tissue cells are atypical squamous cells, no intercellular bridges, no keratinization. Well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma generally refers to grade 1 or grade 2 squamous cell carcinoma. The degree of differentiation is relatively good and the degree of malignancy is relatively low, so when it is well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma, it is the mildest symptom.