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Spitz nevi in African Americans: A retrospective chart review of 11 patients
Author(s) -
Farid Yostina I.,
Honda Kord S.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of cutaneous pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.597
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1600-0560
pISSN - 0303-6987
DOI - 10.1111/cup.13903
Subject(s) - spitz nevus , medicine , pagetoid , dermatology , retrospective cohort study , melanocytic nevus , pathology , nevus , melanoma , immunohistochemistry , cancer research
Background Spitz nevi are benign melanocytic neoplasms that typically present as rapidly growing solitary lesions on the head, neck, or lower extremities. Very rare reports have been described in African Americans. Methods A single‐institution 29‐year retrospective review of African American patients diagnosed with Spitz nevi was thoroughly analyzed in order to characterize these rare clinical and histopathologic presentations. Results Eleven African Americans with spitzoid lesions were identified. Seven (64%) cases were in pediatric patients and nine (82%) were in females. Most lesions were hyperpigmented (73%) and elevated (82%). Six (55%) were compound Spitz nevi, three (27%) were dermal Spitz nevi, and two (18%) were junctional Spitz nevi. Two lesions had more than one atypical feature. Histopathologically, common features were symmetry, sharp circumscription, pagetoid spread (55%) with most being centrally, predominance of epithelioid cells (64%), Kamino bodies (45%), slight pigmentation (46%), maturation of dermal component with depth, and lack of subcutaneous fat involvement or ulceration. Excision was performed on all patients and there were no recurrences although follow‐up was limited. Conclusion Awareness of the possibility and various presentations of Spitz nevi in African Americans will help prevent misdiagnosis.

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