Actinic keratoses (AKs) are common dysplastic epidermal lesions resulting from chronic and excessive ultraviolet exposure [
1]. AKs are more common in male sex, phototypes I and II, and in old age [
2,
3]. The majority of AKs persist, regress, or regress and relapse, but some progress to invasive squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) [
1]. The real risk of progression is difficult to quantify and has been variously estimated by different authors. The estimated annual risk of progression of an individual AK to SCC is believed to be small (0–0.6%) [
4‐
6], but the cumulative lifetime risk for a patient with multiple AK lesions to develop a SCC is around 6–10% [
6‐
9]. This percentage is even higher in immunosuppressed subjects, such as organ transplant patients [
10,
11]. It has long been assumed that clinical thickness and histological grade of dysplasia were predictive factors of the aggressive potential of AKs [
12‐
15]. However, the recent Literature has challenged these two consolidated assumptions. Clinical thickness (Grades I–III) cannot predict aggressiveness of AKs, since it does not correlate neither with the grade of dysplasia nor with p53 expression [
16‐
18]. Likewise, the histopathological grade of dysplasia (AK I–III) is not necessarily correlated to the invasive potential of AKs [
19,
20]. Indeed, progression to invasive SCC may occur through two possible pathways: the classic pathway, which implies progressive transformation from basal keratinocyte atypia (AK I) to full-thickness epidermal atypia (AK III) and the differentiated pathway, in which invasion can occur directly from a proliferation of atypical basaloid cells limited to the epidermal basal layer (AK I) [
13,
21,
22]. So, neither the clinical grade nor the histological grade of dysplasia seems valid predictors of aggressive potential of AKs. On the other hand, the mutational status in AKs appears to predict well the clinical course [
1]. Bakshi et al. in a perspective study found that decreased E-cadherin and increased p53 were associated with progression from AK to non-melanoma skin cancer [
1]. Mutations in the TP53 tumor suppressor gene is the most common genetic abnormality in human cancer and the majority of TP53 gene mutations result in a non-functional protein resistant to degradation, which consequently accumulates in cell nuclei. Thus, immunohistochemical staining for p53 can suggest mutation status by marking non-functional p53 [
23]. Over the years, this technique evolved into an accurate surrogate reflecting the underlying TP53 gene mutation status of a tumor [
23‐
25]. This technique has been widely used in studying cancerogenesis in various tissues and organs and numerous studies support the validity of this technique in keratinocyte derived skin cancers [
23,
26‐
28]. The aim of this study was to investigate how the intensity of p53 staining (p53 staining index) might vary according to body site, histological subtype and grade dysplasia of AKs. Secondly, we sought to investigate the distribution in the epidermal layers of non-functional p53 (zonal staining patterns).