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3/2011
vol. 62
 
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Primary esophageal malignant melanoma

Justyna Szumiło
,
Andrzej Dąbrowski

POL J PATHOL 2011; 3: 148-151
Online publish date: 2011/11/17
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Introduction

Primary esophageal malignant melanoma is a highly aggressive but very rare tumour that accounts for 0.1-0.4% of all the esophageal malignancies [1]. Up to now less than 300 primary esophageal melanomas have been reported in the literature [2]. Since most reports were based on single cases or small series, little is known about genetic and molecular events that lead to development and spread of such lesions. Recently, a few genetic alterations in NRAS, BRAF and KIT have been found [3-5]. Furthermore, in single cases, positive immunoreaction with p53 protein, survivin and PDGFRA (platelet-derived growth factor receptor ) were also reported [4, 6]. Such data can be helpful for future application of new targeted therapies that can improve poor survival of patients with this malignancy.

In the current paper, clinical and morphological features of three cases of primary esophageal malignant melanomas in Caucasian patients diagnosed and treated in one medical centre are presented.

Material and methods

Three cases of primary esophageal melanoma were found in over 150 surgical esophageal specimens diagnosed during the last fifteen years (1995-2009) at the Department of Clinical Pathomorphology and treated at the 2nd Department of General Surgery, Medical University of Lublin. The skin or mucosal melanoma of other sites was excluded. In all cases, microscopic diagnosis was confirmed by immunohistochemical reactions with a panel of antibodies including HMB45, Melan A, S-100 protein, cocktail cytokeratin (MNF116), epithelial membrane antigen (EMA), desmin and smooth muscle actin (SMA). All antibodies and visualization system (EnVision+TM/HRP) were purchased from Dako (Denmark) and applied according to the manufacturer’s directions.

Case descriptions

Basic data of all cases of primary esophageal malignant melanomas are presented in Table I. In cases 1 and 3, a large exophytic tumour obliterated the lumen of the esophagus (Fig. 1) giving symptoms of dysphagia [7]. In cases 1 and 2, the flat pigmented area that corresponded to melanocytosis, atypical junctional melanocyte proliferation (Fig. 2) or frank in situ melanoma was also seen. Two tumours (1 and 3) were composed of spindle-shaped and epithelioid atypical melanocytes (Fig. 3). In case 2, in which two separate lesions, i.e. gastric and esophageal were metachronously revealed, both melanomas were formed exclusively by epithelioid cells (Fig. 4 A-B) [8]. Tumours varied as far as amount and distribution of melanin are concerned. Tumour in case 1 was mostly microscopically amelanotic but in case 3, a large amount of a randomly located pigment was found both in the primary tumour and nodal metastases. All tumours were HMB45, Melan A (Fig. 5) and S100 positive, whereas other markers were negative. The natural history of patient no. 2 was especially unusual since esophageal lesions (with microscopic features typical of the primary one) were found over five years after successful treatment of gastric melanoma.

Discussion

The esophageal mucosa is normally devoid of melanocytes. However, due to aberrant migration of melanoblasts from the neural crest to the esophagus during embryogenesis, they are found in 2.5-8.0% of organs [9]. An increased number of melanocytes on the epithelial-stromal junction with an increased amount of melanin is called melanocytosis or less appropriately, melanosis. This phenomenon is noted in about 13-25% of primary esophageal melanomas as well as in chronic esophagitis, squamous epithelial hyperplasia and infiltrating squamous cell carcinoma, especially in some Asian populations [9, 10]. It is supposed that melanocytosis is the consequence of proliferation of pre-existing esophageal melanocytes, scattered neuroectodermal cells or pluripotent stem cells [10]. It seems that progression from benign melanocytic lesions to atypical melanocytic proliferation precedes invasive melanoma. However, such process observed in subsequently taken endoscopic samples has been reported sporadically [11]. Nevertheless, according to the detailed study by Sanchez et al. [12], presence of the melanocytosis and in situ melanoma is regarded as crucial in the microscopic distinction between primary esophageal melanoma and metastatic melanoma to the esophagus. In fact, both lesions are rare and metastatic malignant melanoma to the esophagus is found just in about 4% of patients with disseminated disease at the autopsy [12].

Primary esophageal malignant melanomas developed more frequently in males (M/F = 2/1) usually in the 6-7th decade of life in the middle and the lower thoracic esophagus. At the early stage, they form an irregular pigmented area, however in time polypoid and ulcerated tumours are the most typical gross appearance of the lesions. Moreover, 85% of tumours are pigmented macroscopically [1].

In the diagnosis of primary esophageal malignant melanoma, multiple investigations are necessary [13]. Histopathological assessment of the samples taken at the upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy seems to be crucial. However, accurate preoperative diagnosis of the esophageal melanoma may be difficult mostly due to inadequate samples (too superficial, scanty tissue material, necrosis) or incorrect diagnosis of other malignant tumour, i.e. poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma, sarcomatoid squamous carcinoma, leiomyosarcoma and liposarcoma. Application of accessory methods like immunohistochemistry (visualization of antigens – HMB45, Melan A, S-100 protein, neuron specific enolase) or rarely electron microscopy (presence of melanosomes) confirmed the diagnosis [14]. Furthermore, in all cases, metastases from skin melanoma have to be clinically excluded [12].

Primary esophageal melanoma is treated by the surgery alone or adjuvant therapies [1]. The total or subtotal esophagectomy with lymph nodes dissection is the preferable mode of treatment. Despite a high percentage of nodal metastases at the time of diagnosis, melanomas are usually locally resectable [15]. More recently endoscopic mucosal resection for early lesions is also applied [16]. Real effectiveness of adjuvant therapies, i.e. radiotherapy, immunochemotherapy or hormone-based therapy is unclear due to a limited number of cases [1, 13]. After the radical esophagectomy, the mean survival is 10-14 months [17]. The 5-year survival rate was reported only in 4-37% cases [1]. Longer survival was usually achieved in patients with early stage disease [13].

Primary esophageal malignant melanoma is a rare but aggressive malignancy. Multicentre studies based on a large and representative group of patients are desirable for better understanding of biology of the tumour to establish new methods of therapy and improve survival.



The manuscript was presented at Scientific Workshops “New trends in research on cancer. Lublin-Utrecht 2010”, Józefów on 5 September 2010.

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Address for correspondence

Justyna Szumiło MD, PhD

Department of Clinical Pathomorphology

Medical University of Lublin

ul. Jaczewskiego 8

20-059 Lublin

Poland

phone: +48 81 718 73 25

fax: +48 81 718 73 24

e-mail: jszumilo@wp.pl
Copyright: © 2011 Polish Association of Pathologists and the Polish Branch of the International Academy of Pathology This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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