Microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MiTF): Promiscuous staining patterns in fibrohistiocytic lesions is a potential pitfall

Publication date: June 2018Source: Pathology - Research and Practice, Volume 214, Issue 6Author(s): Sambit K. Mohanty, Shivani Sharma, Dinesh Pradhan, Shivani R. Kandukuri, Navid Farahani, Catherine Barry, Julie M. Wu, David Frishberg, Bonnie BalzerAbstractMicrophthalmia-associated transcription factor (MiTF) is used as a marker of melanocytic differentiation. However, MiTF immunoexpression has also been observed in histiocytes, macrophages, smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts, which raise the concern of fibrohistiocytic (FH) lesions being misdiagnosed as melanoma based on MiTF immunoreactivity. MiTF has been known to be positive in FH tumors, but this is the first study evaluating ninety-three fibrohistiocytic neoplasms to understand and delineate the staining pattern of MiTF in these tumors. Ninety-three cases of FH, 30 cases of melanocytic lesions, and 20 miscellaneous cases were studied. The FH cases included benign fibrous histiocytoma (BFH, n = 29), angiofibroma (AF, n = 11), fibromatosis (FM, n = 14), keloid (KE, n = 10), atypical fibroxanthoma (AFX, n = 7), dermal scar (DS, n = 9), dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (DFSP, n = 12), and pigmented DFSP (Bednar tumor, n = 1). Benign fibrous histiocytoma were sub-categorized into dermatofibroma (n = 15) and epithelioid fibrous histiocytoma (n = 14). The melanocytic lesions included desmoplastic melanoma (DM, n = 8), melanoma in-situ (MIS, n = 5), re-excision-free of melanoma (R...
Source: Pathology Research and Practice - Category: Pathology Source Type: research