An Atypical Deep Penetrating Nevus With Mutations in Beta Catenin , BRAFV600E , and IDH1R132C in an 8-Year-Old Boy.

Am J Dermatopathol

Department of Anatomical Pathology, PathWest Laboratory Medicine, Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre, Nedlands, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.

Published: August 2022

Deep penetrating nevus (DPN) is a pigmented melanocytic tumor which typically displays a wedge-shaped deep penetrating architecture. Some cases show a coexisting component resembling conventional melanocytic nevus. These morphological attributes are correlated with the acquisition of genomic alterations in the Wnt pathway on a background of underlying activating MAPK pathway mutations. Lesions with features of DPN, but displaying expansile architecture, sheet-like arrangement of cells, cytological atypia, and/or more than rare mitotic activity have been described as "atypical deep penetrating nevus" or "deep penetrating melanocytoma." The molecular correlates of these atypical morphological features are not well-established. In this case report, we describe a tumor in an 8-year-old boy with histological features of atypical DPN showing somatic BRAFV600E , beta catenin , and IDH1R132C mutations. The combination of abnormalities in MAPK and Wnt pathways with IDH1 mutations seems to be a reproducible feature in a subset of atypical DPNs. Whether this "three-hit" combination is associated with a significant risk of adverse outcome remains to be established.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/DAD.0000000000002198DOI Listing

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