Abstract

Sebaceous tumours and keratoacanthomas are uncommon neoplasms that constitute important clinical criteria for Muir-Torre syndrome (MTS) diagnosis. In MTS patients, the increased risk of developing synchronous or metachronous visceral malignancies is characterised by autosomal dominant inheritance. However, there are further conditions, other than MTS, that increase the risk of sebaceous neoplasms, e.g. iatrogenic immunosuppression. In this latter scenario, the sebaceous tumours can present microsatellite instability (MSI) and loss of mismatch repair (MMR) proteins, characteristic of hereditary syndromes, even in the absence of MMR germline mutations. In this article, we examine transplant probands in which the immunosuppressive therapies unmask the MTS cutaneous phenotypes, showing MSI and loss of MMR protein expression, as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Furthermore, MMR genes sequencing analysis identified the presence of germline mutations in MTS-suspected individuals, in the absence of a visceral MTS phenotype. It is well known that immunosuppression plays a central role in the development of sebaceous tumours in both MTS and in non-syndromic settings. Sebaceous skin tumours' MSI status and IHC profiles can be influenced by epigenetic or iatrogenic factors; however, they constitute valuable tools and a cost-effective approach to screen individuals who otherways should undergo MMR genes direct sequencing in the context of immunosuppression. In this complex setting, the choice of the immunosuppressive drug becomes a critical decision for the management of both MTS and sporadic transplant patients, which may benefit from the administration of immunosuppressive drugs, resulting in a low impact on skin cancerogenesis.

Highlights

  • Immunosuppressed organ transplant recipients have an increased risk of malignancies [1]

  • It has been demonstrated that the cumulative risk of nonmelanoma skin cancers (NMSCs) in transplant recipients may be as high as 40% by 20 years after transplantation [1]

  • Ponti et al.: Mismatch repair genes and immunosuppressed patients arises in transplant recipients [3,4,5], even though the sebaceous appendageal tumours are uncommon, difficult to diagnose before excision and pathological analysis, and usually associated to hereditary cancer syndromes [6,7,8]

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Summary

Introduction

Immunosuppressed organ transplant recipients have an increased risk of malignancies [1]. The literature reports that sebaceous tumours and keratoacanthomas occurring during immunosuppression show MSI and loss of IHC expression of MMR proteins, even in the absence of documented MMR germline mutations [17, 18].

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