Table 1: Genotype-phenotype correlation in keratinocytic epidermal nevi

 

Gene

Mutations

Clinical features of nevi

Histologic features of nevi

Other associated features

KRT1 or KRT10

Heterozygous dominant negative (only in nevus)

Verrucous, keratotic plaques; may be thick and spiny or have shedding of scale; palmoplantar involvement (esp. with KRT1 mutations)

EHK

None

KRT16 (V1 domain)

Heterozygous dominant negative (only in nevus)

Verrucous, keratotic plaques limited to palm(s) and sole(s)

EHK

(? Nail dystrophy, follicular keratoses, and oral leukokeratosis as in pachyonychia congenita)

FGFR3 or PIK3CA

Heterozygous activating (only in nevus)

Soft, velvety-to-papillomatous plaques; more pronononced in body folds; sparing of palms and soles

No EHK

FGFR3: craniofacial dysmorphism, other skeletal abnormalities, developmental dealy, risk of bladder carcinoma

 

PTEN

Homozygous loss-of-function: germline + 2nd hit in nevus

Thick, papillomatous plaques (Cowden nevus)

No EHK

Segmental Overgrowth, Lipomas, Ateriovenous Malformations (SOLAMEN); macrocephaly; later onset trichilemmomas, acral keratoses, and oral papillomas; risk of breast, thyroid, and endometrial carcinoma

Unknown Proteus syndrome gene

Unknown

Thin, smooth plaques

No EHK

Progressive, asymmetric, disproportionate overgrowth; cerebriform connective-tissue nevi, slow-flow vascular malformations, dysregulated adipose tissue

EHK, epidermolytic hyperkeratosis
FGFR, fibroblast growth factor receptor
KRT, keratin
PIK, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog
A Blaskolinear configuration, variable hyperigmentation, and histopathologic findings of acanthosis, papillomatosis, and hyperkeratosis may be observed in all variants.