3D Printed Metastatic Melanoma
Clinical History
In the 1970s, a 31-year-old woman presented with severe headache and diplopia on a background
of having a pigmented skin lesion (diagnosed as an invasive skin melanoma) removed from her neck 8 months
earlier. Clinical examination revealed no abnormality, and following discharge the patient was later re-admitted
with persistent vomiting. Her condition deteriorated and she died.
Pathology
This specimen demonstrates widespread intracerebral melanoma metastases. The inferior surface is
characterised by many elevated dark nodules up to 1.5 cm in diameter. Similar lesions are present on the cut
superior surface where it is seen that these secondary melanotic deposits are confined exclusively to the grey
matter. The tumour deposits are not encapsulated and are invading the cortex. Some necrosis and haemorrhage is
present.
Further information
Of all patients who have metastatic disease to the brain, 10% are from skin melanoma. Risk
increases with age over 60 years, male gender, disease duration and more advanced tumour/metastatic stage. BRAF
and NRAS mutations, expression of CCR4 receptors on tumour cells, and activation of the PI3K pathway are all
risk factors for the development of cerebral metastasis. 80% of melanoma brain metastases are supratentorial.
Presentation is often with headache, neurologic deficits and/or seizures. Furthermore, these lesions are at risk
of spontaneous haemorrhage. Modern diagnosis is based on neuroimaging and often histology of a stereotactic
brain biopsy, if no previous diagnosis has been made. Treatment includes stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS),
radiotherapy and/or systemic therapy with “checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy” or targeted treatments. This has
improved median survival upto 11 months in recent years.\
GTSimulators by Global Technologies
Erler Zimmer Authorized Dealer