From the publishers of The New England Journal of Medicine

Save time and stay informed. Our physician-editors offer you clinical perspectives on key research and news.

  1. Home>
  2. Specialties>
  3. Dermatology>
  4. Summary and Comment

Elastin: A Matter of Boundaries

An easily available tool helps to evaluate nevi-associated malignant melanoma.

Malignant melanomas (MMs) may arise de novo or associated with a melanocytic nevus; as many as 30% of MMs are of this second type. Evaluation of nevi-associated MMs is complicated by difficulties in distinguishing the boundaries between the nevus and the MM, but the need to determine Breslow thickness and tumor stage makes such distinction important. Because distinctive patterns of elastic fibers occur in nevi and MMs, these researchers evaluated the use of elastic-fiber staining in diagnosis.

In this retrospective study, researchers stained tissues from 30 patients with nevus-associated MMs, 12 control patients with melanocytic nevi, and 14 control patients with invasive melanomas. Staining was performed with the histochemical elastic van Gieson (EVG) stain and elastin immunostain. Elastin was superior for delineating the elastic fibers in the papillary and reticular dermis. In the control nevi and in the nevi component of the nevi-associated MMs, the elastic fibers were found between nests of melanocytes and around individual melanocytes. These elastic fibers were thicker, longer, and straighter than elastic fibers of uninvolved skin. In the control MM and in the invasive component of nevi-associated MM, elastic fibers were sparse or absent in the stroma and nests, and the melanoma pushed down and compressed the thin elastic fibers, forming a border between the nevus and the MM. In more than half the cases, the nevi were detected underneath the MM. An inflammatory response in the pigmented lesion obscured the pattern of staining.

Comment: HMB-45 and Ki-67 are histochemical tools used for evaluating nevi-associated melanoma. Now, elastin staining, which shows differences in the growth pattern and stromal responses in nevi and melanoma and the presence of a border, provides an additional strategy for identification in challenging cases, although it will not be useful for inflamed thin lesions.

Angelica Maria Selim, MD

Published in Journal Watch Dermatology September 18, 2009

Citation(s):

Kamino H et al. The use of elastin immunostain improves the evaluation of melanomas associated with nevi. J Cutan Pathol 2009 Aug; 36:845.

Your Remark:

Reader Remarks are intended to encourage lively discussion of clinical topics with your peers in the medical community. Please consider this when composing your remark.

Fields marked with an * are required.

Name as you'd like it to appear:

Submitting a comment indicates you have read and agreed to the remark guidelines and declare:*

PRIVACY: We will not use your email address, submitted for a comment, for any other purpose nor sell, rent, or share your e-mail address with any third parties. Please see our Privacy Policy.

 

CLEAR erases anything you've added in any part of the form. CONTINUE allows you to check your entire post (and edit it if necessary) before submitting.

To ensure that your Reader Remark is not formatted as one long paragraph, precede new paragraphs with either a blank line or an indentation.

Search

Advanced

Article Tools

Reader Remarks

Sign-In

Forgot your password?

New to Journal Watch?

E-mail Alerts

Delivered to your inbox.
Tailored to your interests. Free.

Sign Up Now!

Journal Watch Newsletters

Available in 13 specialties with convenient delivery and 10 free online CME exams.

Subscribe Now!

Copyright © 2009. Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.