J Korean Soc Plast Reconstr Surg.  2001 Mar;28(2):140-144.

Reconstructive Treatment of Subungal Malignant Melanoma Through the Early in Situ Level Diagnosis

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, College of Medicine, Dong-A University.

Abstract

Subungal malignant melanoma is a relatively rare disease with reported incidence between 1% to 3% of all melanoma cases in the USA, 10% to 31% in Japan. It is a serious disease with a survival period of 5 years. This poor prognosis is the result of late diagnosis in many of the cases, usually the patient not presenting himself early enough in the course of the disease. However, far more important is the frequent failure of the physician or surgeon to recognize the clinical signs and to perform a biopsy from the correct site, which leads to an accurate diagnosis. Therefore we focused the nail color change of the subungal malignant melanoma to diagnose the disease at the early stage. Five patients who visited our hospital with nail color change into black took the biopsy. This should be done on nail bed and matrix lesions which shows color change into black. A wedge form is taken from the area with maximal clinical concern, including normal tissue at the edge of the lesion. In cases of melanoma in situ (4 cases) diagnosed during the previous biopsy, surgical treatment was done as soon as possible. The melanoma was excised by Mohs technique and the margins were checked by frozen section. If the margins and base of tumor did not have micrometastasis, immediate reconstruction using various flaps was done. In case that micrometastasis was suspicious however, special staining using HMB45 immunostaining was done for confirmation. After a few days for special staining, delayed reconstruction was done. By means of the early diagnosis and Mohs micrographic operation technique, we could excise the tumor completely and preserve the tendon, bone, joint and length of digits.

Keyword

Malignant melanoma; Subungal

MeSH Terms

Biopsy
Delayed Diagnosis
Diagnosis*
Early Diagnosis
Frozen Sections
Humans
Incidence
Japan
Joints
Melanoma*
Neoplasm Micrometastasis
Prognosis
Rare Diseases
Tendons
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