Abstract

Tumoral melanosis is a form of completely regressed melanoma that usually presents as darkly pigmented lesions suspicious for malignant melanoma. Histology reveals dense dermal and subcutaneous infiltration of melanophages. Pembrolizumab is an antibody directed against programmed death receptor-1 (PD1) and is frontline treatment for advanced melanoma. An 81-year-old man with metastatic melanoma treated with pembrolizumab who developed tumoral melanosis at previous sites of metastases is described. The PubMed database was searched with the key words: antibody, immunotherapy, melanoma, melanosis, metastasis, pembrolizumab, and tumoral. The papers generated by the search and their references were reviewed. The patient was initially diagnosed with lentigo maligna melanoma on the left cheek three years earlier, and he was treated with wide local excision. The patient was subsequently diagnosed with epidermotropic metastatic malignant melanoma on the left parietal scalp 14 months later and was treated with wide local excision. Three months later, the patient was found to have metastatic melanoma in the same area of the scalp and was started on pembrolizumab immunotherapy. The patient was diagnosed with tumoral melanosis in the site of previous metastases nine months later. The patient remained free of disease 13 months after starting pembrolizumab. Tumoral melanosis may mimic malignant melanoma; hence a workup, including skin biopsy, should be undertaken. Extensive tumoral melanosis has been reported with ipilimumab, and we add a case following treatment with pembrolizumab. Additional cases of tumoral melanosis may present since immunotherapy has become frontline therapy for advanced melanoma.

Highlights

  • Tumoral melanosis is a rare presentation of completely regressed melanoma that presents as darkly pigmented lesions, which are clinically suspicious for melanoma

  • Pembrolizumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody directed against programmed death receptor-1 (PD1) that is approved as frontline treatment of advanced melanoma [2]

  • We describe the clinical features of a man with tumoral melanosis whose metastatic melanoma was treated with pembrolizumab, and we review the literature of tumoral melanosis

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Summary

Introduction

Tumoral melanosis is a rare presentation of completely regressed melanoma that presents as darkly pigmented lesions, which are clinically suspicious for melanoma. An 81-year-old man with a history of nonmelanoma skin cancer, currently being treated with pembrolizumab for metastatic melanoma, presented for evaluation three blue patches on his left lateral posterior scalp. He provided a signed photo consent for clinical images to be used. A punch biopsy was taken to remove the pigmented area; pathology showed an aggregate of atypical melanocytes in a nodular configuration in the papillary and reticular dermis with small areas of junctional involvement and folliculotropism (Figures 6-7).

Discussion
66 Pigmented
NR macule
Conclusions
Disclosures
Piérard GE
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