Nevus sebaceus of Jadassohn is a hamartoma that combines epidermal, follicular, sebaceous, and apocrine gland abnormalities. Classically, several types of cutaneous neoplasms have been associated with this hamartoma, with basal cell carcinoma being the most frequently described malignancy. We studied a series of 155 examples of nevus sebaceus of Jadassohn with clinicopathologic correlation. Several histopathologic changes related to the age of the patients were found. In our series, we could not identify any cases of authentic basal cell carcinoma. In contrast, several examples of primitive follicular induction and of trichoblastomas were seen. Other cutaneous hamartomas, hyperplasias, and neoplasms found in our series of nevus sebaceus of Jadassohn included syringocystadenoma papilliferum, sebomatricoma, apocrine gland cyst, poroma, different histopathologic variants of warts (classic warts, tricholemmoma, and desmoplastic tricholemmoma), primitive follicular induction, and ductal induction. In our series, no examples of malignant neoplasms were identified. On the basis of these findings, the classically recommended treatment for this hamartoma, which consists of early excision to prevent the development of malignancy, seems to be inappropriate.
Epithelioid blue nevus is a rare variant of blue nevus that has been recently described in patients with Carney complex. Some of the patients with Carney complex have multiple epithelioid blue nevi and a familial history of similar lesions is often recorded. Epithelioid blue nevus consists of an intradermal melanocytic nevus composed of polygonal epithelioid cells laden with melanin. Neoplastic cells show no maturation at the base of the lesion and, in contrast with the usual stromal changes in blue nevi, epithelioid blue nevus exhibits no fibrosis of the dermis. We have studied three cases of epithelioid blue nevus in three patients with no evidence of Carney complex. The lesions were solitary and there was no family history of similar lesions. Therefore, epithelioid blue nevus is a distinctive variant of blue nevus that may also appear as a sporadic lesion and is not always associated with Carney complex.
Apocrine hidradenoma is a benign adnexal neoplasm with apocrine differentiation. The neoplasm is composed of four different types of epithelial cells, including pale or clear cells, polygonal cells, mucinous cells and squamous cells, with variable proportions of them from case to case. In most examples of this neoplasm, clear or the polygonal cells are predominant, whereas the other types of neoplastic cells are less abundant. We report two cases of apocrine hidradenoma mostly composed of squamous cells. Histopathologic examination showed that the neoplasms were composed of both solid and cystic areas. The solid aggregations of neoplastic cells were composed of a peripheral layer of basaloid polygonal cells, whereas squamous cells forming the bulk of the aggregations. These squamous cells showed large eosinophilic cytoplasm and vesicular nuclei with prominent nucleoli. In one case, small foci of mucinous cells could also be seen in some aggregations of neoplastic cells, mostly around ductal structures. In both the cases, some of the tubular structures lined by epithelial cells showed evidence of decapitation secretion in their luminal border. The neoplastic stroma consisted of sclerotic collagen bundles when compared with adjacent normal dermis, and artefactual clefts separated the neoplasms from the surrounding tissue. The rare cases described in this report are exceptional because most of the neoplastic cells showed squamous appearance and for that reason we think that squamous cell apocrine hidradenoma is the most appropriate name for these neoplasms.
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