3.2.4 Keloid

Grading & Level of Importance: C
Review:
2026

W. Burgdorf, Munich; A. Salam, J. McGrath, London
Revised by S. Hobelsberger, Dresden; C. C. Zouboulis, Dessau

ICD-11

EE60

Synonyms

Cheloid, Cicatrix keloidalis.

Epidemiology

Higher incidence in dark-pigmented populations, during puberty and pregnancy and in positive family history.

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Incidence in dark-pigmented populations 4.5-16% (African, Asian, and Hispanic descent), higher compared to Caucasians. Higher incidence during puberty and pregnancy. A positive family history increases the risk for the development of keloids although no specific gene has been identified. Rare genetic syndromes can confer increased risk for the development of keloids including Rubinstein-Taybi and Goeminne syndromes.

Definition

Benign scar tissue which grows beyond the borders of the original injury or surgical defect.

Aetiology & Pathogenesis

Aberrant wound healing of surgical wounds, injuries (piercings, tattooing, scarification, insect bites, vaccinations), burns, skin-damaging infections, acne, increased skin tension, spontaneous (no trigger found). Overproduction of collagen I and III (20x greater than that of healthy skin and 3x greater than a hypertrophic scar).

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Keloids are a result of aberrant wound healing of surgical wounds, injuries (piercings, tattooing, insect bites, vaccinations), burns, skin-damaging infections, acne, increased skin tension, spontaneous (no trigger found). In keloids, the fibroblastic phase of wound healing continues unchecked, resulting in the clinical and histopathological findings. Keloidal fibroblasts have increased proliferative activity, persist for longer, and have lower rates of apoptosis compared to the ones in typical wound healing. Overproduction of collagen (20x greater than that of healthy skin and 3x greater than a hypertrophic scar). Transforming growth factor-β (promotes chemotaxis of fibroblasts to the site of inflammation and produces collagen) and platelet-derived growth factor are the primary drivers of this process.

Signs & Symptoms

Bizarre sharply bordered nodular proliferation of connective tissue with erythema, pruritus and sometimes pain. Keloid extends beyond original defect.

Localisation

Predilection sites: presternal, neck, shoulders, tense wounds, joints.

Classification

No international classification exists, clinically: suppurative keloid, presternal keloid, juxta-articular keloid, folliculitis keloidalis nuchae.

Laboratory and other workups

None.

Dermatopathology

Increased whorls of thickened, hyalinized collagen bundles of the dermis.

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Increased whorls of thickened, hyalinized collagen bundles widely known as keloidal collagen (up to 55% of specimens). Random organization of Type I and Type III collagen fibers. Horizontal fibrous band in the upper reticular dermis.

Course

Keloids may develop 1 to 12 months after injury. Do not improve with time or heal spontaneously.

Complications

Contractures over joints hamper motion, chronic itching/pain.

Diagnosis

History, clinical features.

Differential Diagnosis

Hypertrophic scar (remains confined to area of surgery or damage), sarcoidosis, dermatofibroma, dermatofibrosarcoma.

Prevention & Therapy

Prevention is essential, cosmetic and elective surgical procedures should be performed considering the development of keloids. Rapid primary closure, adequate hemostasis, reduction of wound tension, compression therapy may reduce keloid development.


Intralesional corticosteroids mostly in combination with contact cryosurgery, intralesional cryosurgery, surgical excision with post-surgical radiation or intralesional steroids, radiotherapy, LASER treatment can be considered.  Topical imiquimod, intralesional botulinum toxin, intralesional bleomycin or 5-fluorouracil, silicone gel tapes.


It is important to manage patient expectations.

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Keloids remain a therapeutic dilemma. Not only are they difficult to treat but incomplete therapy can lead to a keloid worsening. Predisposed individuals should avoid elective procedures, if possible, especially ear piercing and tattooing (primary prevention).

In accidental trauma or required surgical interventions, rapid primary closure, adequate haemostasis and reduction of wound tension reduce the risk for keloid development (secondary prevention).

Compression therapy with pressures of 15-45 mmHg for more than 23 hours per day for at least 6 months may reduce keloid development (tertiary prevention).

Intralesional corticosteroids (2 mg/cm2) 4 to 6 sessions at 15-30-day intervals alone or in monthly sessions after contact (pressure) (30 sec), cryocontact surgery (edema inducing for easier insertion) followed by intralesional corticosteroids, intralesional cryosurgery, surgical excision accompanied with post-surgical radiation or intralesional steroid injections (due to recurrence rates of 45-100% after surgery alone), radiotherapy (adjuvant therapy 24 h following excision), LASER treatment (Pulse-dye, 585 nm, Nd-YAG, 1065 nm) can be considered. Other treatments (topical imiquimod following excision, intralesional botulinum toxin, intralesional bleomycin or 5-fluorouracil, silicone gel tapes) may alleviate symptoms and reduce the volume of existing keloids.

It is important to manage patient expectations.

Special

None.

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Differential Diagnosis

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