Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • CCND1 (14)
  • CDKN2A (1)
  • cohort (1)
  • diagnosis (1)
  • humans (1)
  • lentigo maligna (1)
  • protein human (1)
  • RREB1 (1)
  • skin neoplasms (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Genomic analysis is an important tool in the diagnosis of histologically ambiguous melanocytic neoplasms. Melanomas, in contrast to nevi, are characterized by the presence of multiple copy number alterations. One such alteration is gain of the proto-oncogene CCND1 at 11q13. In melanoma, gain of CCND1 has been reported in approximately one-fifth of cases. Exact frequencies of CCND1 gain vary by melanoma subtype, ranging from 15.8% for lentigo maligna to 25.1% for acral melanoma. We present a cohort of 72 cutaneous melanomas from 2017-2022 in which only 6 (8.3%) showed evidence of CCND1 gain by chromosomal microarray. This CCND1 upregulation frequency falls well below those previously published and is significantly lower than estimated in the literature ( P < 0.05). In addition, all 6 melanomas with CCND1 gain had copy number alterations at other loci (most commonly CDKN2A loss, followed by RREB1 gain), and 5 were either thick or metastatic lesions. This suggests that CCND1 gene amplification may be a later event in melanomagenesis, long after a lesion would be borderline or equivocal by histology. Data from fluorescence in situ hybridization, performed on 16 additional cutaneous melanomas, further corroborate our findings. CCND1 gain may not be a common alteration in melanoma and likely occurs too late in melanomagenesis to be diagnostically useful. We present the largest chromosomal microarray analysis of CCND1 upregulation frequencies in cutaneous melanoma, conjecture 3 hypotheses to explain our novel observation, and discuss implications for the inclusion or exclusion of CCND1 probes in future melanoma gene panels. Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

    Citation

    Jason R McFadden, Advaita S Chaudhari, Mirjana Stevanovic, Gregory J Tsongalis, Edward G Hughes, Aravindhan Sriharan. Gain of CCND1 May Occur Too Infrequently in Cutaneous Melanoma, and Too Late in Melanomagenesis, to Be Diagnostically Useful: Genomic Analysis of 88 Cases. The American Journal of dermatopathology. 2023 May 01;45(5):311-319

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 36939129

    View Full Text