4.1 Article

Insulinoma-associated 1: A novel nuclear marker in Merkel cell carcinoma (cutaneous neuroendocrine carcinoma)

Journal

JOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 129-135

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cup.13079

Keywords

carcinoma; cutaneous neuroendocrine; immunoperoxidase; INSM1; Merkel cell; neuroendocrine

Funding

  1. Department of Pathology AMP
  2. Laboratory Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison [PRJ51JR]
  3. UWCCC [P30 CA014520]
  4. University of Wisconsin Translational Research Initiatives in Pathology Laboratory

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Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare, clinically aggressive, cutaneous neuroendocrine (NE) neoplasm. As a tumor with small, round, blue cells, the histologic differential diagnosis for MCC can include melanoma, metastatic small cell carcinoma (SCC), nodular hematopoietic tumors, basal cell carcinoma (BCC), atypical variants of squamous carcinoma and the uncommon occurrence of primary cutaneous Ewing sarcoma. In cases with atypical histology or without the classic immunophenotype, the diagnosis can be challenging. Ultimately, immunohistochemistry (IHC) is essential to the definitive diagnosis of MCC and in difficult cases, the diagnosis may hinge entirely on the immunophenotype of the tumor cells. Insulinoma-associated 1 (INSM1) is a transcription factor expressed in tissues undergoing terminal NE differentiation. As a nuclear protein tied to both differentiation and the cell cycle, INSM1 may offer additional utility in comparison to traditional, cytoplasmic markers of NE differentiation.

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