AI Article Synopsis

  • A 63-year-old man developed a painless swelling in his left eyelid, leading to a diagnosis of a unique sebaceous papilloma found through a biopsy, which exhibited benign characteristics.
  • The tumor was associated with Meibomian gland duct epithelium and showed a loss of the MSH6 protein, suggesting a possible link to a rare variant of Muir-Torre syndrome.
  • Genetic testing in similar cases is needed to determine whether the mutations are germline or somatic, helping to understand the relationship between the tumor and Muir-Torre syndrome.

Article Abstract

Over several months, a painless, multinodular, non-erythematous swelling of the deep tissues of his left upper eyelid developed in a 63-year-old man. An excisional biopsy with histopathologic evaluation disclosed a unique sebaceous papilloma within a cyst lined by non-keratinizing squamous epithelium that focally displayed a variably thick, superficial, eosinophilic cuticular layer. Immunohistochemical staining demonstrated that the tumor and its epithelial cystic lining had a profile consistent with Meibomian gland duct epithelium. Adipophilin highlighted cytoplasmic vacuolar lipid positivity. The encapsulation of the lesion, absence of nuclear atypia, and Ki-67 nuclear positivity restricted to the basilar cells established its intrinsically benign nature. The patient's clinical history was remarkable for pulmonary and colonic carcinomas resected, respectively, 20 years and 8 years earlier. DNA mismatch repair protein expression studies disclosed loss of nuclear immunostaining of MSH6 protein, pointing to the possibility of an underlying rare MSH6 variant of the Muir-Torre syndrome, not yet described in the ophthalmic literature. p16 nuclear positivity was also found in the tumor cells, indicating the possible role of high-risk human papillomavirus as an additional factor in the genesis of the tumor. Genetic evaluation of normal and tumoral tissues in future similar cases will detect if there is an underlying germline mutation versus a somatic mutation limited to the tumor. This will be required to fully establish a predictable linkage with this new subtype of the Muir-Torre syndrome.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.survophthal.2019.09.002DOI Listing

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