| Literature DB >> 24924836 |
Emilia H DeMarchis1, Susan M Swetter, Charay D Jennings, Jinah Kim.
Abstract
Morphologic heterogeneity among melanocytic proliferations is a common challenge in the diagnosis of melanoma. In particular, atypical melanocytic lesions in children, adolescents, and young adults may be difficult to classify because of significant morphologic overlap with melanoma. Recently a four-probe fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) protocol to detect chromosomal abnormalities in chromosomes 6 and 11 has shown promise for improving the classification of melanocytic lesions. We sought to determine the correlation between FISH results, morphology, and clinical outcomes in a series of challenging melanocytic proliferations in young patients. We retrospectively performed the standard four-probe FISH analysis on 21 melanocytic neoplasms from 21 patients younger than 25 years of age (range 5-25 years, mean 14.6 years) from Stanford University Medical Center who were prospectively followed for a median of 51 months (range 1-136 months). The study cohort included patients with 5 confirmed melanomas, 2 melanocytic tumors of uncertain malignant potential (MelTUMPs), 10 morphologically challenging atypical Spitz tumors (ASTs), and 4 typical Spitz nevi. FISH detected chromosomal aberrations in all five melanomas and in one MelTUMP, in which the patient developed subsequent lymph node and distant metastasis. All 10 ASTs, 4 Spitz nevi, and 1 of 2 MelTUMPs were negative for significant gains or losses in chromosomes 6 and 11q. Our findings demonstrated a strong correlation between positive FISH results and the histomorphologic impression of melanoma. This finding was also true for the MelTUMP with poor clinical outcome. Therefore FISH may serve as a helpful adjunct in the classification of controversial melanocytic tumors in young patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24924836 PMCID: PMC4282368 DOI: 10.1111/pde.12382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Dermatol ISSN: 0736-8046 Impact factor: 1.588
Figure 1Spitz/Spitzoid lesions. (A–C) Specimen from a 10-year-old boy with a 4-mm brown papule on the left upper arm. (A, B) Spitz nevus—small, well-circumscribed, symmetric junctional melanocytic lesion composed of vertically oriented nests of spindled to epithelioid melanocytes with abundant cytoplasm, large nuclei, prominent nucleoli, and prominent pagetoid scatter of the melanocytes. (C) Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) negative. (D–F) Specimen from a 25-year-old woman with a right lower leg lesion. (D, E) Atypical Spitz tumor. Compound melanocytic proliferation, with spindle features compatible with a Spitz nevus. Cytologic features vary from larger discohesive cells with prominent nucleoli to smaller mature melanocytes in the dermal component. Mild inflammatory infiltrate associated with this lesion and occasional epidermal Kamino bodies. No significant pagetoid spread or dermal mitotic figures. Hyperchromasia of dermal melanocytes, dyshesion within epidermal nests, and lack of definitive dermal architectural and cytologic maturation are seen. (F) FISH negative. (G–I) Specimen from a 16-year-old boy with a dark brown macule with central black papule, slowly enlarging. (G, H) Spitzoid melanoma. Atypical but well-defined compound melanocytic lesion, asymmetric with heavy, brisk lymphocytic host response and uneven pigmentation. Prominent, multifocal pagetoid upward scatter of malignant melanocytes into the epidermis. The tumor expands the dermis and focally consumes the epidermis. The atypical melanocytes are epithelioid with pink–brown cytoplasm and pleomorphic, irregular nuclear contours. Frequent mitotic figures are identified and enumerated at 3/mm2. (I) FISH positive (RREB and CCND1 positive) of uncertain malignant potential.
Figure 2Atypical melanocytic lesions. (A–C) Specimen from a 20 year-old man with a left posterior scalp lesion. (A, B) Atypical melanocytic tumor of uncertain malignant potential (MelTUMP). Infiltrative predominantly intradermal spindle cell melanocytic proliferation extending to subcutaneous tissue. The epidermis is irregularly acanthotic without evidence of ulceration. Composed of spindled melanocytes in intersecting fascicles. A dermal mitotic figure is identified on hematoxylin and eosin stained sections. Melan-A and Ki-67 double-labeled immunohistochemical stain failed to identify a proliferating dermal melanocytic population. (C) Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) negative. (D–F) Specimen from a 16-year-old girl with scalp melanoma. (D, E) Melanoma. Extensive epidermal ulceration and a markedly atypical compound melanocytic population of lentiginous, haphazardly nested spindled melanocytes with dusky cytoplasm, pleomorphic nuclei, and prominent nucleoli within the epidermis with extensive pagetoid scatter. Kamino bodies are not appreciated. Atypical cells extending from the epidermis through the dermis into the subcutaneous fat demonstrate numerous mitotic figures (5/mm2) and lack maturation with downward descent. There is ulceration and prominent epidermal consumption by the melanocytic proliferation. Focally, areas suggestive of regression are noted at the epidermal surface of the lesion. (F) FISH positive (CCND1 positive). (G–I) Specimen from a 15-year-old boy with an enlarged mastoid lymph node. The patient had an initial atypical compound melanocytic proliferation of the right scalp diagnosed at 13 years of age. (G, H) Metastatic melanoma. Lymph node extensively infiltrated by an array of atypical pigmented cells with high nuclear to cytoplasmic ratios, irregular nucleoli, and dense chromatin. Heavy pigmentation is present in some of the cells. Lesional cells are mitotically active and zones of necrosis and areas of fibrosis are seen. (I) FISH positive (RREB and CCND1 positive).
Probe Construction
| Gene | Loci | Probe color | Abnormal | Abnormality | Cutoff% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6p25 | Red | >2 red | Aneuploidy of | 16 | |
| 6p25 CEN6 | Red Blue | red > aqua | Aneuploidy of | 53 | |
| 6q23 CEN6 | Yellow Blue | yellow < aqua | Deletion of | 42 | |
| 11q13 | Green | >2 green | Aneuploidy of | 19 |
Interpret in the context of other pathology and clinical data.
Patient Demographic Characteristics and Follow-Up
| Histopathologic diagnosis | Age (years) | Sex | Site | Therapy | Clinical follow-up | Follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Junctional SN | 10 | Male | Left upper arm | Excised | NED | 106 |
| Compound ST | 8 | Female | Right arm | Excised | NED | 51 |
| Compound ST | 8 | Female | Right inner knee | Excised | NED | 9 |
| Compound ST | 7 | Female | Right lower leg | Transected, NFT | NED | 1 |
| Predominantly intradermal AST from agminated SN | 22 | Male | Midback | Excised, negative SLNB | NED | 60 |
| Severely AST | 25 | Female | Right lower leg | Excised | NED | 136 |
| Compound AST | 23 | Female | Right midback | Excised | NED | 75 |
| Borderline ST | 9 | Male | Posterior chest wall | Excised, negative SLNB | NED | 12 |
| Compound AST | 8 | Male | Right lateral knee | Excised | NED | 97 |
| AST | 5 | Female | Nose | Excised | NED | 6 |
| Compound AST | 9 | Female | Left thigh | Excised | NED | 1 |
| Compound AST | 19 | Male | Upper back | Excised | NED | 9 |
| Compound AST | 23 | Male | Left 2nd toe | Excised, positive SLNB, | NED | 28 |
| Severely atypical compound spitzoid tumor | 10 | Male | Right knee | Transected, status post WLE, negative SLNB | NED | 13 |
| Predominantly intradermal AMP | 20 | Male | Left posterior scalp | Transected (lost to follow-up) | NED | 5 |
| Compound AMP | 13 | Male | Right mastoid LN (1o scalp) | Excised, negative SLNB | LN | 56 |
| Invasive SSM with ulceration | 16 | Female | Scalp | Excised, negative SLNB | LN and distant metastases | 52 |
| MM LN | 20 | Male | Right sup. inguinal LN (1o right foot) | Excised, positive SLNB and CLND | LN and distant metastases, died of disease | 15 |
| SSM with ulceration | 17 | Female | Neck | Excised, negative SLNB | NED | 98 |
| Spitzoid melanoma | 16 | Male | Left upper back | Excised, negative SLNB | NED | 92 |
| SSM | 19 | Female | Left cheek | Excised, negative SLNB | NED | 60 |
SN, Spitz nevus; ST, Spitz tumor; AST, atypical Spitz tumor; AMP, atypical melanocytic proliferation; SSM, superficial spreading melanoma; MM, metastatic melanoma; NED, no evidence of disease; NFT, no further therapy; CLND, complete lymph node dissection; WLE, wide local excision; NED, no evidence of disease; SLNB, sentinel lymph node biopsy; LN, lymph node.
Treated as melanocytic tumor of uncertain malignant potential.
SLNB positive for one node in left groin.
LN metastases noted at 24 months.
Distant metastases noted at 45 months.
FISH Results for Four-Probe Panel, According to Diagnosis
| Diagnosis | Age (years) | Sex | Clinical follow-up | Follow-up (months) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Junctional SN | 10 | Male | NED | 106 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound ST | 8 | Female | NED | 51 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound ST | 8 | Female | NED | 9 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound ST | 7 | Female | NED | 1 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Predominantly intradermal AST from agminated SN | 22 | Male | NED | 60 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Severely AST | 25 | Female | NED | 136 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound AST | 23 | Female | NED | 75 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Borderline ST | 9 | Male | NED | 12 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound AST | 8 | Male | NED | 97 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| AST | 5 | Female | NED | 6 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound AST | 9 | Female | NED | 1 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound AST | 19 | Male | NED | 9 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound AST | 23 | Male | NED | 28 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Severely atypical compound ST | 10 | Male | NED | 13 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Predominantly intradermal AMP | 20 | Male | NED | 5 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Compound AMP | 13 | Male | LN | 56 | Positive | Normal | Normal | Positive |
| Invasive SSM with ulceration | 16 | Female | LN and distant metastases | 52 | Normal | Normal | Normal | Positive |
| MM LN | 20 | Male | LN and distant metastases, dead of disease | 15 | Positive | Normal | Normal | Positive |
| SSM with ulceration | 17 | Female | NED | 98 | Positive | Normal | Normal | Positive |
| Spitzoid melanoma | 16 | Male | NED | 92 | Positive | Normal | Normal | Positive |
| SSM | 19 | Female | NED | 60 | Positive | Normal | Normal | Positive |
FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; SN, Spitz nevus; ST, Spitz tumor; AST, atypical Spitz tumor; AMP, atypical melanocytic proliferation; SSM, superficial spreading melanoma; MM, metastatic melanoma; NED, no evidence of disease; LN, lymph node.
LN metastases noted at 24 months.
Distant metastases noted at 45 months.