1. Melanocytic Skin Neoplasms: What Lesson From Genomic Aberrations?
- Author
-
Carmelo Urso
- Subjects
Male ,Neuroblastoma RAS viral oncogene homolog ,Skin Neoplasms ,Nevi and melanomas ,Context (language use) ,Dermatology ,Biology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nevus, Epithelioid and Spindle Cell ,medicine ,Humans ,Nevus ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,HRAS ,Melanoma ,neoplasms ,beta Catenin ,Chromosome Aberrations ,BAP1 ,GNA11 ,Biopsy, Needle ,Genomics ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,GTP-Binding Protein alpha Subunits ,Mutation ,Cancer research ,Education, Medical, Continuing ,Female ,GNAQ ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Studies on the genomic aberrations in melanocytic neoplasms have shown a complex genomic landscape. In nevi and melanomas, a MAP-kinase pathway activation was generally found, produced by different chromosomal aberrations, including BRAF, NRAS, HRAS, GNAQ, GNA11, BAP1, CTNNB1, MAP2K1, PRKAR1A, and NF1 mutations, and ALK, ROS1, NTRK1, RET, MET, BRAF, NTRK3, and PRKCA fusions. Melanomas also showed a variable number of additional mutations ablating tumor-suppression mechanisms and activating other oncogenic pathways, including CDKN2A loss, PTEN loss, as well as TP53 and TERT-promoter mutations. Moreover, borderline melanocytic tumors displayed the same chromosomal aberrations, but more mutations than nevi and fewer than melanomas. In this context, the notion that melanocytic neoplasms can be classified as benign/malignant is hardly supportable, because all neoplasms harbor a certain number of mutations and the progression risk, that is, the malignant potential, is related and proportional to the burden of pathogenic mutations. Moreover, from the genomic analysis, in parallel to the current diagnostic categories of "nevi," "melanomas," and "melanocytomas," some aggregations or classes of tumors based on the characteristic types of driver mutations/fusions emerge as possible and more rationale, including Spitzoid neoplasms, blue neoplasms, BAP1-inactivated melanocytic neoplasms, deep penetrating melanocytic neoplasms, pigment-synthesizing melanocytic neoplasms, and "common" melanocytic neoplasms. Each of these classes, showing the same driver mutations/fusions, demonstrates to have the same pathogenesis and may be genetically considered as a single tumor, although with a variable amount of progression risk. Histologic features, being an expression of the mutational state, could be used to obtain an approximate risk assessment in each single tumor.
- Published
- 2019
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