| Literature DB >> 30782194 |
Tatiana S Belysheva1, Yana V Vishnevskaya1, Tatiana V Nasedkina1,2, Marina A Emelyanova2, Ivan S Abramov1,2, Kristina V Orlova3, Ludmila N Lubchenko1, Igor A Utyashev1, Marina B Doroshenko1, Lev V Demidov1, Mamed D Aliev1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A giant congenital melanocytic nevus (GCMN) is found in 0.1% of live-born infants. If present, the lesion has a chance of about 6% to develop into malignant melanoma. Both children and adults can be affected by malignant melanoma arising in a giant congenital nevus. Up to 95% of GCMNs harbor NRAS mutations, and mutations in the BRAF, MC1R, TP53, and GNAQ genes have also been described. The individualization of therapy is required, but diagnostic and prognostic criteria remain controversial. CASE PRESENTATIONS: We report two cases: 1) melanoma arising in a giant congenital nevus during the first month of life complicated with neurocutaneous melanosis (NCM), and 2) melanoma arising in a giant congenital nevus during the first 6 months of life. Pathology, immunohistochemistry, and genetic analyses of tumor tissue were performed. The first case revealed only a non-pathogenic P72R polymorphism of the TP53 gene in the homozygote condition. For the second case, a Q61K mutation was detected in the NRAS gene.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic analysis; Giant congenital melanocytic nevus; Infants; Melanoma; NRAS mutation; Neurocutaneous melanosis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30782194 PMCID: PMC6381634 DOI: 10.1186/s13000-019-0797-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Fig. 1Patient M at 22 days old before surgery. a Front and (b) back views. A nodule was diagnosed in the lumbar-sacral part (marked with a red circle)
Fig. 2Cutaneous melanoma; hematoxylin and eosin staining. a Nodular melanoma. Polymorphous melanocytes in the basal layer of the epidermis (transparent arrow) in the dermis in the condition of nested clusters and fields (black arrow), × 10 magnification. b Ulceration on the surface of the tumor (arrow), × 10 magnification
Fig. 3Cutaneous melanoma; immunohistochemical staining of Ki-67. a × 10 and (b) × 40 magnifications
Fig. 4Magnetic resonance imaging shows the presence of melanin in the structure of the brain. a Postcontrast axial T1-weighted (W) MRI and (b) postcontrast sagittal T1W image with focus on the altered MR signal in the left hemisphere of the cerebellum is determined. c Sagittal T1W image with focus on the abnormal MR signal on the cerebral pia mater of the cerebellum. The imaging findings described were diagnostic for neurocutaneous melanosis
Fig. 5Patient L at 5 months old before treatment. a Front view and (b) back view
Fig. 6A melanoma satellite in the subcutaneous tissue. Hematoxylin and eosin staining, × 5 magnification
Clinical and genetic features of patients with congenital melanocytic naevus (CMN) and melanoma: literature data and own experience
| Author, Case № | Sex | Age at diagnosis (years) | Outcome/time after diagnosis | MRI CNS | Primary melanoma site | Tissue for genetic analysis | Genetics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Literature data | |||||||
| Streams et al., Case 1 [ | Female | 44 | Alive | Not done | Primary malignant melanoma of the left forearm underneath an intact skin graft 40 years after having had a partial excision and grafting of her GCMN | Not done | Not done |
| Tchernev et al., Case 1 [ | Female | 61 | Alive | Not done | Malignant melanoma of the occipital region (stage IIB) | Not done | Not done |
| Lalor et al., Case 1 [ | Female | 8 | Alive | Normal | Nodular melanoma on the scalp | Primary tumor | |
| De la Rosa Carillo [ | 0 d | Died, 5mo | NCM | Large, multilobular, pigmented lesion covering 35% of the body, atypical melanocytic proliferation. Congenital melanoma. | Several biopsies | ||
| Kinsler et al., Case 4 [ | Male | 15, 5 | Alive, 11 mo | Normal | Cutaneous, within largest CMN on the back of the scalp and neck, metastatic to local lymph node at time of diagnosis | Cutaneous melanoma | |
| Kinsler et al., Case 10 [ | Male | Not known | Death, age 2,4 years | Normal | Lymph node groin, locally recurrent despite excision, local metastasis | Not done | Not done |
| Kinsler et al., Case 12 [ | Female | 6,5 | Death, 6 mo | Normal | Cutaneous, within largest CMN, at the site of postnatal resection of a benign congenital nodule, metastatic to local lymph node at time of diagnosis | Cutaneous melanoma | |
| Maguire et al., Case 2 [ | Female | 7 mo | Alive, 9 mo | Not done | Cutaneous, on the groin site. A wide local excision was done. At 16 months of age enlarged node in the groin, metastatic melanoma | Not done | Not done |
| Own experience | |||||||
| Case 1 | Male | 22 d | Alive | NCM | Congenital cutaneous malignant melanoma of the lumbar-sacral part | Primary tumor | |
| Case 2 | Male | 5 mo | Alive | Normal | Congenital cutaneous malignant melanoma of the back of the neck | Primary tumor | |