Café au lait stains
Last Updated: 2023-07-07
Author(s): Anzengruber F., Navarini A.
ICD11: LC1Y
Milk coffee stains
- Congenital, sharply demarcated, homogeneous, light brown spots
- Clinical syndromes with café-au-lait spots:
- Ataxia teleangiectatica
- Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome
- Bloom syndrome (BLM, inactivated DNA helicase)
- Cobb syndrome
- Cowden syndrome
- Fèvre-Languepin syndrome
- LEOPARD syndrome
- Legius syndrome (SPRED gene, Ras signalling pathway)
- Multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN)
- McCune Albright syndrome (Gs protein gene, activates adenylate cyclase)
- Neurofibromatosis types I (neurofibromin gene), II (merlin gene). VI
- Noonan syndrome (PTPN11 gene)
- Piebaldism
- Silver-Russel syndrome (H19, IGF2 genes)
- Tuberous sclerosis (TSC1 gene)
- Turner syndrome
- Watson syndrome (neurofibromin)
- Prevalence: up to 20% (in light-skinned populations)
- In approx. 3% of all newborns
Sharply but irregularly circumscribed, up to palm-sized, homogeneous, oval, light-brown, milk-coffee-coloured macules.
Avoid common mistakes:
- If there are ≥ 6 café au lait spots, peripheral neurofibromatosis type I must be excluded
- Caution - does not count as a nevus cell naevus
Basal hyperpigmentation, proliferation of melanocytes in neurofibromatosis type 1 and LEOPARD syndrome, but no proliferation of melanocytes in sporadic café-au-lait macules. Occasionally giant melanosomes (electron microscopy)
Growth in size during childhood.
- No regression
- Good skin lesion
- No degeneration known
- Landau, M. and B.R. Krafchik, The diagnostic value of café-au-lait macules. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1999. 40(6): p. 877-890.
- Langenbach, A.P.M.N., Naevi Spili, Café-au-lait Spots and Melanocytic Naevi Aggregated Alongside Blaschko's Lines, with a Review of Segmental Melanocytic Lesions. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 1998. 78(5): p. 378-380.
- McLean, D.I. and R.P. Gallagher, “Sunburn” freckles, café-au-lait macules, and other pigmented lesions of schoolchildren: The Vancouver Mole Study. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1995. 32(4): p. 565-570.
- Watson, G.H., Pulmonary stenosis, cafe-au-lait spots, and dull intelligence. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1967. 42(223): p. 303-307.
This website uses cookies!
We use cookies to tailor our content to your needs and continuously improve our website. You can decide which cookies you want to allow. Detailed information about the cookies we use can be found in our Privacy Policy and Cookie Settings. You can withdraw your consent at any time.