Metastatic Melanoma With Features of Desmoplastic Melanoma in a Patient With Primary Cutaneous Superficial Spreading Melanoma With Epithelioid Features

We present a case of a 30-year-old man who developed an irregular, purple, tender plaque measuring 2.5 cm on the right pretibial region. Wide excision of the right leg lesion showed superficial spreading melanoma with epithelioid cells and no spindle cell component. Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy showed an atypical melanocytic proliferation involving one inguinal lymph node with subcapsular and intraparenchymal components. There were spindled tumor cells in lymph node capsule with hyperchromatic nuclei, which were nested within desmoplastic stroma, and were S100- and SOX10-positive and MART1- and HMB-45 negative; in addition to epithelioid tumor cells, which were S100-, SOX10-, and MART1-positive. Multiple discontinuous foci, subcapsular atypical melanocytes, and extracapsular extension helped in excluding capsular nevus. These findings were consistent with DM. Herein, we present an unusual case of primary cutaneous superficial spreading melanoma of the right leg with a predominantly epithelioid morphology that developed metastases to the SLN. The metastasis exhibited divergent differentiation, including both epithelioid morphology identical to the primary, but with additional features of DM that were nonoverlapping with the primary lesion.
Source: The American Journal of Dermatopathology - Category: Pathology Tags: Extraordinary Case Report Source Type: research