4.5 Article

Lethal melanoma in children: a clinicopathological study of 12 cases

Journal

PATHOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 7, Pages 705-711

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.pathol.2016.08.008

Keywords

Lethal melanoma in children; paediatric melanoma; clinicopathologic assessment; architectural features; cytomorphologic features

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Melanoma in children is rare, representing 3% of paediatric malignancies and <1% of all melanomas. Very few detailed descriptions of bona fide lethal childhood melanomas exist in the literature. We performed a retrospective clinicopathological review of 12 paediatric (<= 16 years) melanoma patients who died of metastatic disease, including detailed assessment of architectural and cytomorphological features. There were nine prepubertal patients (median age 7 years old) and three postpubertal cases (median age 15 years old). The patients died on average 45.7 months after diagnosis with the prepubertal subcohort showing a relatively longer time from diagnosis to death. The tumours were bulky (average tumour thickness = 10 mm), showed brisk mitotic activity (average mitotic count per mm(2) = 7), and were formed by large expansile nodules with sheet-like growth pattern and infiltrative borders in the majority of cases (83%). Cytologically, large grossly pleomorphic epithelioid cells with massive eosinophilic macronucleoli were present in most cases (75%). In this cohort, we did not identify specific features of melanoma that were unique to children. Although melanomas are extremely rarely encountered in childhood, the above-cited unequivocal malignant features should prompt an outright diagnosis of melanoma even in a paediatric patient.

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