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The regenerating naevus

Authors :
Ricardo E. Vilain
Richard A. Scolyer
Stanley W. McCarthy
Source :
Pathology. 48(2)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The re-emergence of a melanocytic proliferation at the site of a previously excised pigmented lesion may not only cause great concern clinically but may also be amongst the most difficult of all melanocytic lesions for pathologists to assess. These lesions can adopt an appearance which may be impossible to confidently distinguish from a regressing or traumatised melanoma on histological grounds alone. For this reason, careful attention must be paid to the clinical context which has given rise to the lesion or a misdiagnosis may occur. In the absence of a corroborating history of prior surgery or trauma to the site, a diagnosis of a regenerating naevus may only be provisional. When considering a diagnosis of regenerating naevus, whenever possible, it is important to review and confirm the benign nature of the precursor lesion. Nevertheless, 50 years of research into this phenomenon has identified certain characteristic clinical features and histological patterns which provide clues both to clinicians and pathologists that will assist them to make the correct diagnosis and avoid over diagnosing as melanoma what is ultimately a benign process.

Details

ISSN :
14653931
Volume :
48
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd9346feb737dff087f15cc8544c2005