Common Subclasses
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Features on Gross Pathology
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Features on Histopathological Microscopic Analysis
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Superficial spreading melanoma |
- Brown/black color, but may include reddish brown or white
- Hyperkeratotic, diffused borders with no distinct demarcation
- Irregular and elevated
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- Presence of intraepidermal lateral spread (most characteristic feature)
- Dermal invasion
- Desmoplasia
- Epidermal hyperplasia
- Appearance of epithelioid cells with occasional spindle cells
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Nodular melanoma |
- Tan/reddish brown color
- Sharp borders
- Well-demarcated, dome-shaped papular/verruccous lesion
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- Sharp border differentiating malignant vs. normal tissue due to absence of intraepidermal lateral spread / no radial growth plate (most characteristic feature)
- Appearance of epithelioid cells with occasional spindle cells
- Melanocytes may have absent/minimal pigmentation
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Acral lentiginous melanoma |
- Brown/black color, but may include reddish brown or white
- Hyperkeratotic, diffused borders with no distinct demarcation
- Irregular and elevated
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- Epidermal acanthosis and hyperkeratosis (mmost characteristic feature)
- Malignant melanocytes spread along the basal layer
- Cells arranged in lentiginous and dycohesive pattern along the dermoepidermal junction
- May be any of round, epithelioid, spindle, or oval cells
- May have perineural or endoneural invasion
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Lentigo maligna melanoma |
- Brown/black color, but may include reddish brown or white
- Hyperkeratotic, diffused borders with no distinct demarcation
- Irregular and elevated
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- Epidermal atrophy and flattening and prominent dermal invasion (most charactersitic feature)
- Large, pleomorphic cells
- Cells arranged in lentiginous and dycohesive pattern along the dermoepidermal junction
- Preservation of retiform epidermis
- May be any of round, epithelioid, spindle, or oval cells
- Evidence of actinic damage of the dermal matrix
- May have perineural or endoneural invasion
- Positivity for CD133+ and CD34+
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Non-cutaneous melanoma |
- Variable morphology depending on location of melanoma
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- Histopathologically similar to other subtypes of melanoma
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Dermoplastic/Spindle cell melanoma |
- Skin colored and morphologically resembles scar tissue
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- Dermal, fibrotic nodule
- Ill-defined, variable spindle cells with irregular contours and stromal desmoplasia
- Highly infiltrative pattern
- Appearance of sclerotic collagen fibers
- Nuclear hyperchromasia
- Appearance of lymphoid aggregates
- Solar elastosis
- Involvement of endoneurium and perineurium (neurotropism)
- Possibly evidence of other melanoma subtypes (co-existing tumors, especially lentiginous melanoma)"
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Nevoid melanoma
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- Morphologically similar to a melanocytic nevus
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- Dermal mitosis
- Hypercellular and monomorphous-appearing dermal melanocytes that have a characteristic sheet-like appearance
- Evidence of cytologic atypia (nuclear enlargement, pleomorphism, irregular nuclear membrane, hyperchromasia)
- Irregular basal infiltration
- Evidence of angiotropism
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Spitzoid melanocytic neoplasm
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- Morphologically similar to a Spitz nevus
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- Appearance of melanocytic proliferation along with features of Spitz tumors (small diametes, well-demarcated, symmetric lesion with no ulceration, epidermal effacement, dermal mitosis, or involvement of the subcutaneous fat)
- May have features that are not typically characteristic of Spitz tumors (ulceration, poor demarcation)
- Vertically oriented spindled melanocytes
- Clefts between junctional melanocytes
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Angiotropic melanoma
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- No gross morphological features that distinguish angiotropic melanoma from other subtypes of melanoma
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- Melanoma cells in close proximity to abluminal surfaces of blood and/or lymphatic channels
- No invasion within the vascular lamina itself
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Blue nevus-like melanoma
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- Morphologically similar to a blue nevus
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- Asymmetric nodular/multinodular appearance
- Aggregates of melaninized, atpical spindle cells
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Composite melanoma
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Features of more than one subtype on gross pathology
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- Features of more than one subtype on microscopic analysis
- May be characterized by one of the following:
- Collision tumor: Collision of melanoma and another nearby malignant tumor
- Colonization: Colonization of melanocytes in a tumor
- Combined: Two distinct tumors appear to have mixed features of the melanoma and the other tumor
- Biphenotypic: One tumor that has features of melanoma and another epithelial malignancy
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