Lacrimal drainage apparatus melanoma remotely following treatment and resolution of conjunctival melanoma.
Travis J PeckMarisa SchoenMaximilian PadillaMindy RabinowitzJoseph CurryTatyana MilmanSara LallyCarol L ShieldsJerry A ShieldsMichael RabinowitzPublished in: Orbit (Amsterdam, Netherlands) (2020)
Lacrimal drainage apparatus melanoma is a rare entity that may arise primarily or, more commonly, as secondary involvement from melanoma originating elsewhere. Conjunctival melanoma may involve the lacrimal drainage apparatus (LDA) via spread along the canalicular epithelium, separate in situ processes, or direct invasion. Only seven cases exist in the literature where conjunctival melanoma remotely recurred in the LDA. We report three additional patients, two with invasive conjunctival melanoma and one with primary acquired melanosis (PAM) with severe atypia/melanoma in situ, who developed LDA melanoma at 5, 8, and 16 years after initial treatment of conjunctival melanoma. This report confirms the ability of conjunctival melanoma to give rise to spatially and temporally remote LDA melanoma despite adequate local treatment, and reviews the proposed mechanisms and associated characteristics of LDA recurrence in conjunctival melanoma.