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Proliferating pilomatricoma : A histopathologic simulator of matrical carcinoma

We report on 9 patients with pilomatricomas that showed unusual histopathologic features. Our patients were mainly elderly individuals (age range 42 to 88 years; mean age 70.1 years) who presented solitary cutaneous nodules situated on the head and neck (7 neoplasms), upper arm (1 neoplasm), and bac...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of cutaneous pathology 1997-04, Vol.24 (4), p.228-234
Main Authors: KADDU, S, SOYER, H. P, WOLF, I. H, KERL, H
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We report on 9 patients with pilomatricomas that showed unusual histopathologic features. Our patients were mainly elderly individuals (age range 42 to 88 years; mean age 70.1 years) who presented solitary cutaneous nodules situated on the head and neck (7 neoplasms), upper arm (1 neoplasm), and back (1 neoplasm). All the lesions were treated by simple excision. Follow-up data available in 7 of the 9 patients (mean follow-up, 17 months) revealed local recurrences in 1 patient whose lesion recurred 3 times. No lymph node involvement or distant metastases were recorded in any of our cases. Histopathologically, most neoplasms were characterized by a relatively large lesion in the dermis that in some cases showed extension to the subcutis. Each lesion was predominantly composed of a lobular proliferation of basaloid cells in association with adjacent focal areas containing eosinophilic, cornified material with shadow cells. In some cases, relatively large areas of shadow cells were present, whereas, in others only small foci of shadows cells were observed. Cytomorphologically, the basaloid cells showed features of matrical and supramatrical cells of a normal hair follicle and exhibited variable nuclear atypia and mitotic figures. The overall architectural pattern of the neoplasms was different from that of large fully developed stereotypical pilomatricomas that maintain a cystic character with basaloid cells predominantly aligned at the periphery. Based on the histopathologic findings, namely the presence of a large, lobular proliferation of basaloid cells in association with small to large foci of shadow cells, we interpreted these neoplasms to be a distinctive proliferative variant of pilomatricoma and propose the designation "proliferating pilomatricoma." Proliferating pilomatricomas should be differentiated from the recently described matricoma, basal-cell carcinoma with matrical differentiation, and matrical carcinoma (pilomatrical carcinoma).
ISSN:0303-6987
1600-0560
DOI:10.1111/j.1600-0560.1997.tb01586.x