Several clinical and histopathologic features of 65 CD30+ cutaneous lymphoproliferations were evaluated for their diagnostic value between CD30+ primary versus secondary cutaneous lymphomas and for their prognostic significance. Primary cutaneous disease, spontaneous regression, and absence of extracutaneous spreading (but not age < or =60 years) were associated with a better prognosis. Epithelial membrane antigen, BNH9, CD15 or CBF.78 antigen were expressed in all types of cutaneous lymphoproliferations. However, epithelial membrane antigen immunoreactivity was more frequently expressed in CD30+ secondary cutaneous large-cell lymphoma. Among CD30+ primary cutaneous large-cell lymphoma, CD15 expression was only seen in localized skin lesions. P53 expression was not associated with spontaneous regression, extracutaneous spreading, or survival. Nested reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction allowed the detection of NPM-ALK transcripts in 10 of 26 CD30+ primary and in 3 of 11 secondary cutaneous large-cell lymphomas. The ALK protein was detected in only 1 of 50 primary and in 4 of 15 secondary cutaneous CD30+ lymphoproliferations. In CD30+ primary cutaneous lymphoproliferation, NPM-ALK transcripts might be expressed by very rare normal or tumoral cells that are undetectable by immunohistochemistry. However, the expression of either NPM-ALK transcripts or ALK-protein was not correlated with prognosis or age in CD30+ cutaneous lymphoproliferations.