The diagnosis of panniculitis is a relatively rare occurrence for many practising pathologists. The smaller subset of lymphocyte-predominant panniculitis is further complicated by the diagnostic consideration of T cell lymphoma involving the subcutaneous tissue, mimicking inflammatory causes of panniculitis. Accurate classification of the panniculitis is crucial to direct clinical management as treatment options may vary from non-medical therapy to immunosuppressive agents to aggressive chemotherapy. Many diseases show significant overlap in clinical and histological features, making the process of determining a specific diagnosis very challenging. However, with an adequate biopsy including skin and deep subcutaneous tissue, a collaborative effort between clinician and pathologist can often lead to a specific diagnosis. This review provides an algorithmic approach to the diagnosis of lymphocyte-predominant panniculitis, including entities of septal-predominant pattern panniculitis (erythema nodosum, deep necrobiosis lipoidica, morphea profunda and sclerosing panniculitis) and lobular-predominant pattern panniculitis (lupus erythematous panniculitis/lupus profundus, subcutaneous panniculitis-like T cell lymphoma, cutaneous γ-δ T cell lymphoma, Borrelia infection and cold panniculitis).
Cellular neurothekeoma is a benign cutaneous neoplasm that typically occurs on the head, neck, and upper body of young adults with a slight female predominance. It is a rare lesion to diagnose and multiple neurothekeomas in one patient are even more uncommon finding. We present a case of multiple neurothekeomas in a middle‐aged woman with lower extremity involvement and summarize the current literature on multiple neurothekeoma patients. A 46‐year‐old female presented with nearly one dozen skin‐colored papules on the head, upper limb, and lower limb. The lesions were clinically diagnosed as dermatofibromas and a nevus. Eight lesions were biopsied and confirmed to be cellular neurothekeomas, with one initially misinterpreted on histology as a dermatofibroma. Awareness of cellular neurothekeoma as a diagnostic entity and the possibility of atypical presentations as seen in our case (eg, in multiple numbers, in older adults, and on the lower extremity) are important in allowing for accurate clinical and histological diagnosis of these lesions. The possibility of a syndromic association with multiple cellular neurothekeomas should be explored further.
Context.— Currently, no universal protocol exists for the assessment of sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) in cutaneous melanoma. Many institutions use a multistep approach with multiple hematoxylin-eosin (H&E) and immunohistochemical stains. However, this can be a costly and time- and resource-consuming task. Objective.— To assess the utility for multistep protocols in the analysis of melanoma SLNs by specifically evaluating the Calgary Laboratory Services (CLS) protocol (which consists of 3 H&E slides and 1 S100 protein, 1 HMB-45, and 1 Melan-A slide per melanoma SLN block) and to develop a more streamlined protocol. Design.— Histologic slides from SLN resections from 194 patients with diagnosed cutaneous melanoma were submitted to the CLS dermatopathology group. Tissue blocks were processed according to the CLS SLN protocol. The slides were re-reviewed to determine whether or not metastatic melanoma was identified microscopically at each step of the protocol. Using SPSS software, a decision tree was then created to determine which step most accurately reflected the true diagnosis. Results.— We found with Melan-A immunostain that 337 of 337 negative SLNs (100%) were correctly diagnosed as negative and 55 of 56 positive nodes (98.2%) were correctly diagnosed as positive. With the addition of an H&E level, 393 of 393 SLNs (100%) were accurately diagnosed. Conclusions.— We recommend routine melanoma SLN evaluation protocols be limited to 2 slides: 1 H&E stain and 1 Melan-A stain. This protocol is both time- and cost-efficient and yields high diagnostic accuracy.
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