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Skin-Melanocytic Tumors

Congenital Nevus

 

Last major update: November 2008 - next update November 2009

Revised: 28 June 2009

Author: Nat Pernick, M.D., PathologyOutlines.com, Inc.

Copyright: (c) 2002-2009, PathologyOutlines.com, Inc.

 

Terminology

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Agminate nevi: means “clustered”; includes nevus spilus (flat mole), a discrete, hyperpigmented foci on a hyperpigmented macular background due to nests of nevus cells within superficial dermis associated with minimal basilar keratinocyte hyperpigmentation

Neuronevus: congenital nevus with prominent neural features

Giant congenital nevus: see below

 

Epidemiology

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● 1-2% of newborns (Dermatology 2007;214:227), 17% of Italian children ages 12-17 years, usually 6-15 mm

● Congenital usually refers to presence at birth, may also refer to clinical appearance or histologic pattern

 

Clinical

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● Usually larger than acquired nevi; may grow rapidly

● Often large, irregular in contour and pigmentation, hair bearing    

● Associated with higher number of common melanocytic nevi and family history of melanoma, but not with sun exposure (Br J Dermatol 2008;159:433)

May be associated with infantile hemangioma (J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:S16)

● Proliferative nodules in these nevi are often p53+ (67%) and c-kit+ (97%), but are usually benign and may regress (AJSP 2004;28:1017)

● Associated with nevus cells in lymph nodes (Am J Dermatopathol 2002;24:1)

Overall risk of melanoma is 0.7% (Br J Dermatol 2006;155:1)

● Acral lesions resemble melanoma clinically

 

Case reports

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● With benign proliferative nodule (J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;59:518)

With subsequent melanoma (Archives 2003;127:e343, J Plast Reconstr Aesthet Surg 2007 Dec 8 [Epub ahead of print])

Halo congenital nevus in 56 year old woman with vitiligo (Australas J Dermatol 2008;49:229)

With smooth muscle hamartoma (J Cutan Pathol 2008;35:83)

Congenital panfollicular nevus (J Cutan Pathol 2007;34:14)

Rapid severe repigmentation after curettage and dermabrasion (Br J Dermatol 2007;156:1251)

 

Treatment and prognosis

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● Early surgical removal, laser resurfacing in neonates (Br J Dermatol 2006;154:889)

 

Clinical images

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Various images

 

Dermoscopy description

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● Globules (83%), hypertrichosis (79%), and reticular networks (71%) (Arch Dermatol 2007;143:1007)

 

Dermoscopic images

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Haloed globules                  Target network and target globules

 

 

                                                    

Reticular pattern and regular globules                         Globular pattern and patchy network

               

Micro description

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● Tends to involve reticular dermis, subcutis, skin adnexa, arrector pili muscles and nerves with single cell permeation of collagen

● Also neural differentiation with Wagner-Meissner-like corpuscles

● Frequent proliferative nodules

● Lesions of infants may have pagetoid melanocytic proliferation

 

Proliferative nodules:

● Dermal nodules of large epithelioid or spindled melanocytes that merge with surrounding nevus cells

● Often prominent nucleoli, cellular areas, focal hemorrhage and ulceration, but no necrosis, no destructive growth, minimal inflammation and 0-4 mitotic figures/10 HPF

● Lesions mature and regress over time

 

Micro images

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Fig 1,2: congenital nevus,

Fig 3: melanoma in axillary

node (inset: S100)

 

Molecular / cytogenetics

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● Lesions present at birth usually have NRAS but not BRAF mutations

● Lesions with congenital type histologic features but not present at birth more commonly have BRAF but not NRAS mutations (J Invest Dermatol 2007;127:179)

 

Video

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DermLectures.com

 

Differential Diagnoses

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● Glomus tumor

● Melanoma

 

Additional references

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eMedicine

 

 

Giant congenital nevus

top

 

Definition

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● May be defined as surface area of 144 cm2 or larger

● 2-42% risk of malignant transformation, with 6-14% lifetime risk of melanoma, often extracutaneous

● Dermatomal, “bathing suit” or “garment” configuration; may involve entire scalp, extremity, most of trunk or placenta

● May have satellite nevi, including within mucosal membranes

● Scalp lesions are often in thickened folds of skin resembling cerebrum, may involute in first 2 years of life (J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:508)

● Truncal nevi may develop symptomatic neurocutaneous melanosis (meningeal or cerebral melanosis), which is lethal in 1/3 (J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:767)

● May give rise to melanoma of skin or CNS or related neuroectodermal tumors (malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor, cutaneous malignant melanotic neurocristic tumor, rhabdomyosarcoma, liposarcoma)

 

Terminology

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● Also called giant pigmented nevus or giant hairy nevus

 

Case reports

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Newborn with neurocutaneous melanosis (J Neuroradiol 2007;34:272)

Part of SCALP syndrome (J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:884)

Neonatal patient with proliferative nodules (Clin Exp Dermatol 2008;33:125)

Ulcerated and sclerotic lesion (Clin Exp Dermatol 2007;32:529)

Desmoplastic giant congenital nevus with progressive depigmentation (J Am Acad Dermatol 2007;56:S10)

 

Treatment and prognosis

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Possibly none for newborn scalp lesions

Excision may require careful planning and several stages (Plast Reconstr Surg 2008;121:1674)

Often split-thickness skin grafting (Ann Plast Surg 2008;60:283)

Laser surgery if inoperable (Clin Exp Dermatol 2007;32:159)

 

Clinical images

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Newborn with giant                            Ulcerated nodule

hairy congenital nevus                      within the scalp

 

 

Fig 1: giant gyrus-like pigmented nevus of scalp before (A) and after (B) excision;

Fig 2: nevus cells in reticular dermis and subcutis; Fig 3: epithelium-like nevus

cells (A) and nevus cells containing melanin (B); Fig 4: some nevus cells are

surrounded by sebaceous glands

 

Micro description

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● Similar to congenital nevus

● Deeper nevus cells may be E-cadherin negative, contributing to their motility (J Dermatol Sci 2008;52:21)

 

Micro images

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Proliferation of melanocytes                           Melanocytes are uniform

along hair follicle                                                in large ulcerated nodule

 

End of Skin-Melanocytic Tumors > Congenital nevus

 

 

 

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