PMID: 8970588Dec 1, 1996Paper

Melanoma: criteria for histological diagnosis and its reporting

Seminars in Oncology
J S Metcalf

Abstract

The diagnosis of malignant melanoma requires clinical recognition of suspect lesions, biopsy, and histologic examination. Histological features which serve to distinguish malignant melanoma from their benign counterparts can be found in both the epidermis and dermis. The intraepidermal component of a common acquired nevus usually consists of more or less uniform theques of melanocytes located at or near the tips of rete ridges. Most melanomas are characterized by less orderly intraepidermal growth with areas in which melanocytes lose their nesting characteristics and are distributed more diffusely, sometimes replacing the basal keratinocytes by confluent growth and sometimes by invading upwards either as single cells or small nests into the upper reaches of the epidermis. Nested melanocytes can be found along the basal layer in malignant melanoma, but these nests are usually quite variable in size and location with respect to the tips of the rete ridges, and they are often irregularly distributed along the breadth of the lesion. The dermal component of malignant melanoma usually shows little tendency towards maturation, unlike that of benign nevi. Mitotic figures are unusual to find in the dermal component of common acquired ne...Continue Reading

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