Visualizing Genetics: An Investigation of Dermoscopy as a Tool for Genetic Variant Prediction in Capillary Malformations
Aretha On, Marie-Chantal Caussade, Allison Britt, Sarah E. Sheppard, Denise Adams, Griffin Stockton Hogrogian, James R. Treat

TL;DR
This study explores how dermoscopy can help predict genetic variants in capillary malformations, potentially improving diagnosis and treatment.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct dermoscopic features linked to specific genetic variants in capillary malformations.
Findings
EPHB4-CMs show branching vessel patterns in dermoscopic images.
RASA1-CMs typically appear as red/pink/brown without visible vessels.
PIK3CA-CMs with purple lacunae suggest a lymphatic component.
Abstract
Capillary malformations (CMs) are congenital malformations of capillaries typically visible as blanchable, pink to brown patches on the skin and/or mucosa. The genetic cause of CMs guides diagnosis, treatment, and recurrence counseling. However, identification may be limited by the availability of samples, the type of tests, and insurance coverage. We hypothesize that there are distinct dermoscopic features associated with specific genotypes of congenital CMs. A single-center, retrospective cohort study of 22 patients with CMs affecting the skin, a polarized dermoscopic photo of the lesion, and a single nucleotide variant in the EPHB4, GNA11/GNAQ, PIK3CA/PIK3R1, or RASA1 genes was performed. Three reviewers analyzed dermoscopic photos for the presence of apparent vessels, branching, lacunae, geometric shape formation, zones of dropout, follicle-sparing, vessel and background color, and…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsVascular Malformations and Hemangiomas · Tumors and Oncological Cases · Vascular Tumors and Angiosarcomas
