Melanoma pathophysiology
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Yazan Daaboul, M.D.; Serge Korjian M.D.
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Overview
Pathophysiology
Molecular Pathogensis
- The development of melanoma begins with the disruption of nevus growth control.[1]
- The progression to melanoma involves the of serine-threonine kinases ofthe ERK-MAPK pathway (mitogen-activated protein kinase) pathway following mutation of either the N-RAS or BRAF oncogene.
- It is thought the the progression to melanoma follows the two-hit hypothesis, where activation of the oncogene alone does not lead to the development of melanoma, and additional mutations, such as loss-of-function mutation of P53 tumor-suppressor gene (or less commonly CDKN2A or PTEN in familial cases) is required for the development of melanoma.[1]
- The development of melanoma may arise de-novo or from pre-existing nevi. In both cases, mutations result in dysplasia and cytologic atypia that predispose to the malignant pontential of the cells.
- As more genes are mutated and the tumor grows, changes include the overexpression of N-cadherin, αVβ3 integrin, MMP-2, MSH, cAMP, and survivin, and the loss of E-cadherin and TRMP1 proteins.[1]
- The following genes are involved in the pathogenesis of melanoma:[1]
- Tumor-suppressor genes:
- P53
- CDK2NA
- PTEN
- RB
- ARF
- Proto-oncogenes:
- N-RAS
- BRAF
- CCND1
Pathology
Common Subclasses | Features on Gross Pathology | Features on Histopathological Microscopic Analysis |
Superficial spreading melanoma |
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Nodular melanoma |
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Acral lentiginous melanoma |
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Lentigo maligna melanoma |
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Non-cutaneous melanoma |
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Dermoplastic/Spindle cell melanoma |
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Nevoid melanoma |
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Spitzoid melanocytic neoplasm |
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Angiotropic melanoma |
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Blue nevus-like melanoma |
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Composite melanoma |
Features of more than one subtype on gross pathology |
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References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Miller AJ, Mihm MC (2006). "Melanoma". N Engl J Med. 355 (1): 51–65. doi:10.1056/NEJMra052166. PMID 16822996.