Significance of Sectioning (Breadloafing) the Entire Skin Tissue When Pathology Does Not Match Clinical Appearance.

Publication date: Jun 26, 2025

Melanocytic nevi, or moles, are benign melanocyte proliferations, often presenting diagnostic challenges when clinical and histopathologic findings are inconsistent. Melanoma in situ (MIS), the earliest melanoma stage, remains confined to the epidermis, making early diagnosis critical for optimal outcomes. This case report highlights the diagnostic utility of the breadloafing, a serial sectioning technique, in cases where conventional histopathology might miss malignancy. This case presents a 35-year-old woman with a recurrent pigmented lesion initially diagnosed as a compound melanocytic nevus. Ten months postbiopsy, the lesion recurred, and subsequent histopathology revealed MIS. The lesion’s complete excision showed an intradermal nevus without atypia, raising concerns of misdiagnosis. However, breadloafing confirmed MIS adjacent to the intradermal nevus. This case highlights the importance of integrating serial sectioning techniques, such as breadloafing, to reconcile clinicopathologic discrepancies and enhance diagnostic accuracy for atypical pigmented lesions.

Concepts Keywords
Breadloafing atypical pigmented lesions
Clinicopathologic biopsy
Misdiagnosis breadloafing technique
Old clinicopathologic correlation
Postbiopsy melanocytic lesions
melanoma in situ
recurrent nevi

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Melanocytic nevi
disease MESH Melanoma
pathway KEGG Melanoma
disease MESH malignancy
drug DRUGBANK Pentaerythritol tetranitrate
disease MESH intradermal nevus
disease MESH misdiagnosis
disease MESH nevi

Original Article

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