Genomic analysis and clinical management of adolescent cutaneous melanoma

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Abstract

Melanoma in young children is rare; however, its incidence in adolescents and young adults is rising. We describe the clinical course of a 15-year-old female diagnosed with AJCC stage IB non-ulcerated primary melanoma, who died from metastatic disease 4 years after diagnosis despite three lines of modern systemic therapy. We also present the complete genomic profile of her tumour and compare this to a further series of 13 adolescent melanomas and 275 adult cutaneous melanomas. A somatic BRAFV600E mutation and a high mutational load equivalent to that found in adult melanoma and composed primarily of C>T mutations were observed. A germline genomic analysis alongside a series of 23 children and adolescents with melanoma revealed no mutations in known germline melanoma-predisposing genes. Adolescent melanomas appear to have genomes that are as complex as those arising in adulthood and their clinical course can, as with adults, be unpredictable.

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Rabbie, R., Rashid, M., Arance, A. M., Sánchez, M., Tell-Marti, G., Potrony, M., … Adams, D. J. (2017). Genomic analysis and clinical management of adolescent cutaneous melanoma. Pigment Cell and Melanoma Research, 30(3), 307–316. https://doi.org/10.1111/pcmr.12574

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