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Porocarcinoma with areas of mucinous differentiation suggesting multilineage differentiation.

Mar Llamas VelascoAngel Fernandez FloresMarcela Saeb-LimaDavid Samuel Cassarino
Published in: Journal of cutaneous pathology (2020)
Porocarcinoma is an infrequent malignant adnexal carcinoma, with some histopathological variants described, such as the clear cell, the sarcomatoid or the pigmented porocarcinoma. We report an invasive porocarcinoma showing areas of tumor cells floating in prominent dermal mucin, simulating mucinous carcinoma, that we consider a new histopathological variant of porocarcinoma. We report a 74-year-old male with previous history of multiple basal cell carcinomas that presented a nodule on his left temple. Histopathologic study showed a large ulcerated multilobular tumor composed of thickened cords of cells emanating from a hyperplastic epidermis and showing a mixed infiltrative and pushing pattern in the dermis. Poroid differentiation was observed in most of the neoplasm, both in intraepidermal and dermal invasive component. Within the neoplasm a prominent area where these small nests with clear formation of ducts were floating in mucinous pools with few septa intermingled was observed, simulating a primary cutaneous mucinous carcinoma. Cytology, immunohistochemistry and the presence of both neoplastic areas as closely related and with multiple points of connectivity favors the consideration of a composite tumor in this peculiar case. Other differentials are discussed.
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