Melanoma ยท Special populationICD-10 C43

Paediatric melanoma

Childhood melanoma; adolescent melanoma; teenage and young adult (TYA) melanoma

Paediatric melanoma is rare โ€” accounting for <1% of all melanomas and approximately 1.5โ€“2% of paediatric cancers in the UK โ€” but its incidence is rising and recognition is challenging because the conventional ABCDE criteria perform poorly in children, who frequently present with amelanotic, bleeding, uniformly coloured, "bump-like" lesions that mimic warts, pyogenic granulomas, Spitz naevi or vascular lesions. The 2013 modified paediatric ABCDE criteria (Cordoro et al.) โ€” Amelanotic, Bleeding / Bump, Colour uniformity, De novo (any diameter), Evolution โ€” improve sensitivity. Important paediatric melanoma subgroups include congenital melanocytic naevus-associated melanoma (largest CMN risk), Spitzoid melanoma (the major adolescent subgroup), conventional adult-type SSM in adolescents, and adolescent acral / mucosal melanomas. UK paediatric melanoma is managed through paediatric / TYA cancer services with adult cutaneous oncology MDT input; specific cancer-syndrome screening (CDKN2A, BAP1, XP) should be considered.

CurrentLast reviewed 22 May 2026

Epidemiology

  • UK incidence — uncommon in patients < 20; most paediatric / TYA cases occur in older adolescents rather than pre-pubertal children. Registry figures should be checked directly for any precise age-band split.
  • Pre-pubertal melanoma is exceptional; incidence rises sharply in adolescence.
  • F>M in adolescents (similar to adult young-onset melanoma).
  • Risk factors:
    • Large or giant congenital melanocytic naevi โ€” see monograph; large CMN risk is about 1โ€“2%, while giant CMN carry about 2โ€“5% lifetime melanoma risk (highest with multiple satellites; historical series quoted higher).
    • Familial melanoma syndromes โ€” CDKN2A, CDK4, BAP1, POT1.
    • Xeroderma pigmentosum โ€” see monograph.
    • Multiple atypical naevi.
    • Immunosuppression โ€” paediatric organ transplant, congenital immunodeficiency.
    • Severe sunburn history; intermittent intense UV exposure.
    • Fair skin / red hair / freckling.

Clinical presentation

  • Conventional ABCDE criteria perform poorly in children.
  • Modified paediatric ABCDE criteria (Cordoro et al., 2013):
    • A โ€” Amelanotic.
    • B โ€” Bleeding / Bump.
    • C โ€” Colour uniformity.
    • D โ€” De novo (any diameter).
    • E โ€” Evolution.
  • Common atypical presentations:
    • Amelanotic pink / red papule or nodule mimicking pyogenic granuloma, Spitz naevus, vascular lesion or wart.
    • Rapidly growing "bump" with bleeding.
    • Uniformly coloured small (<6 mm) lesion.
    • Lesion arising within an existing congenital melanocytic naevus โ€” beware "satellite" lesions or atypical macular pigmentation.
  • Frequent diagnostic delay โ€” paediatric melanomas are misdiagnosed clinically and pathologically (Spitzoid melanoma vs atypical Spitz tumour vs Spitz naevus is genuinely difficult).

Paediatric melanoma subgroups

  • Spitzoid melanoma โ€” the major adolescent subgroup; molecularly distinct from conventional melanoma (kinase fusions in ALK, ROS1, NTRK1, MAP3K8 in ~50% of Spitz family lesions); pathologically challenging.
  • Conventional adult-type SSM โ€” older adolescents; behaves like adult melanoma with similar molecular drivers (BRAF, NRAS).
  • Congenital melanocytic naevus-associated melanoma โ€” typically arises in the dermis or CNS leptomeninges of giant CMN; NRAS-driven; particularly in the first decade.
  • Acral / mucosal melanoma in adolescents โ€” rare but clinically distinctive; KIT mutations.
  • Familial melanoma in adolescents โ€” CDKN2A / CDK4 / BAP1.

Management

  • Refer to paediatric / TYA cancer service in collaboration with adult cutaneous oncology MDT.
  • Diagnostic biopsy โ€” full excisional biopsy with 1โ€“2 mm clinical margin is preferred for any clinically suspicious lesion in a child.
  • Histological review by an experienced paediatric / Spitzoid dermatopathologist; consider molecular profiling (CGH, FISH for kinase fusions, methylation profiling) for histologically equivocal lesions.
  • Wide local excision and sentinel lymph node biopsy use NICE NG14 stage-based margin and SLNB discussion principles, applied with paediatric / TYA MDT input; SLN biopsy is more often positive in paediatric than adult melanoma but the prognostic significance of SLN positivity is less clear in children.
  • Adjuvant immunotherapy (pembrolizumab, nivolumab) โ€” emerging evidence in adolescent melanoma; clinical-trial enrolment encouraged.
  • Targeted therapy (BRAF / MEK inhibitor combination) for BRAF-mutant disease in adolescents; NTRK / ALK / ROS1 inhibitor for kinase-fusion-positive Spitzoid melanoma.
  • Genetic counselling โ€” consider germline CDKN2A / BAP1 / POT1 / XPC / XPA / XPV testing where family history or clinical features suggest a hereditary syndrome.
  • Long-term psychosocial support and dedicated TYA pathway.

Prognosis

Stage-matched survival is broadly comparable to adult melanoma; SLN positivity rate is higher but the prognostic implication is less stark. Adverse factors โ€” congenital giant CMN-associated melanoma (poor prognosis); large primary; ulceration; advanced stage; xeroderma pigmentosum or other DNA-repair syndrome.

References

  1. Cordoro KM et al. Pediatric melanoma โ€” results of a large cohort study and a proposal for modified ABCD detection criteria for children. J Am Acad Dermatol; 2013.
  2. Saiyed FK et al. Pediatric melanoma โ€” review. Pediatr Dermatol; 2017.

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