Spitz/Reed nevi: a review of clinical-dermatoscopic and histological correlation

Spitz/Reed nevi: a review of clinical-dermatoscopic and histological correlation

Authors

  • Ana F. Pedrosa Department of Dermatology and Venereology, Centro Hospitalar São João EPE, Porto, Portugal
  • Jose M. Lopes Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal
  • Filomena Azevedo Department of Dermatology and Venereology, Centro Hospitalar São João EPE, Porto, Portugal
  • Alberto Mota Department of Dermatology and Venereology, Centro Hospitalar São João EPE, Porto, Portugal

Keywords:

dermatoscopy, Reed nevus, spindle and/ or epithelioid cell nevus, Spitz nevus

Abstract

Background: Spitz/Reed nevi are melanocytic lesions that may mimic melanoma at clinical, dermatoscopic and histopathological levels. Management strategies of these lesions remain controversial.

Objectives: We aim a correlation among clinical-dermatoscopic and histological features of a series of Spitz/Reed nevi diagnosed during 7 years at the Department of Dermatology.

Methods: Clinical, dermatoscopic and histological features of Spitz/Reed nevi diagnosed at our tertiary hospital from 2008 to 2014 were reviewed in order to seek correlation.

Results: All described dermatoscopic patterns for Spitz/Reed nevi were found among the 47 enrolled patients; starburst and atypical/multicomponent patterns prevailed (57.4%). Reticular pattern predominated among children younger than 12 years, whereas homogeneous pattern was more frequent in patients older than 12 years, although these differences were not statistically significant (P=0.785). Among histological atypical lesions, all dermatoscopic patterns were represented, but the atypical/multicomponent predominated (56.3%). Two out of 11 dermatoscopically atypical lesions did not show histopathological counterpart.

Conclusions: The excision of Spitz/Reed nevi in adults is supported, given the inability to accurately predict those with histopathological atypia, based on clinical and dermatoscopic features, which may raise concern about malignancy.

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Published

2016-04-30

Issue

Section

Review

How to Cite

1.
Pedrosa AF, Lopes JM, Azevedo F, Mota A. Spitz/Reed nevi: a review of clinical-dermatoscopic and histological correlation. Dermatol Pract Concept. Published online April 30, 2016:37-41. doi:10.5826/dpc.0602a07

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