
Harrison's PodClass: Internal Medicine Cases and Board Prep
Produced by McGraw Hill, Harrison's Podclass delivers illuminating and engaging discussions led by Drs. Cathy Handy Marshall and Charlie Wiener of The John Hopkins School of Medicine on key topics in medicine, featuring board-style case vignettes from Harrison's Review Questions and chapters from the acclaimed Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine – available on AccessMedicine from McGraw Hill.
Harrison's PodClass: Internal Medicine Cases and Board Prep
Ep 127: A 65-Year-Old Male with a Spot on His Foot
This episode presents a 65-year-old man with a new pigmented lesion on the sole of his foot. The discussion focuses on the differential diagnosis.
[upbeat intro music]
[Dr. Handy] Hi everyone. Welcome
back to Harrison's Podclass.
We're your co-hosts. I'm Dr. Cathy Handy.
[Dr. Wiener] And I'm Dr.
Charlie Wiener and we're joining
you from the Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine.
[music continues]
[Dr. Handy] Welcome to episode 127:
a 65-year-old man with a spot on his foot.
[Dr. Wiener] Cathy, today's
patient is a 65-year-old
African-American man who comes
to the clinic complaining
or telling us about a spot on his foot.
He noticed it a few months ago and he says
it's been getting bigger
over the past two months.
It's on the bottom of his foot,
so he is not exactly sure
when it first appeared.
He denies any local or systemic symptoms
associated with this.
His only medications are
metformin for diabetes
and losartan for hypertension.
On physical examination,
his vital signs are all
within normal limits.
You take a closer look at his foot
and you see that there's about
a half a centimeter round,
dark, macular lesion
with irregular borders.
It's not tender on exam
and you cannot feel it when
you're rubbing over it.
So the question's going to ask,
which of the following is
the most likely diagnosis?
And the options are A.
acral lentiginous melanoma;
B. diabetic foot ulcer;
C. dysplastic nevus;
D. lentigo maligna melanoma;
or E. syphilis.
[Dr. Handy] Well, I'd
love to see a picture,
but since this is a podcast,
we obviously can't do that.
[Dr. Wiener] Well, the picture
can be found in the 20th
edition of the Harrison's
Self-Assessment book,
but I think there are
aspects of the history
and the description that help
you get to the right answer.
[Dr. Handy] Absolutely. So
first, I am struck by the fact
that it's non-tender,
non-raised, and not red,
so that makes infection less likely.
I recognize that he has diabetes
and those patients are
prone to foot ulcers
and infections that may not be painful,
but the bottom of the
foot would be unusual.
And given what sounds like mild diabetes
and a normal sensory exam,
it doesn't sound like he
has extensive neuropathy.
So I'm going to rule out the
diabetic foot ulcer as a cause.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay. What's next?
[Dr. Handy] Well, the next
notable thing is the timing.
So he reports that the lesion
has grown in two months.
Dysplastic nevi are benign,
irregularly pigmented
and shaped melanocytic hematomas
with some atypical cellular features
and are frequently associated
with familial melanoma.
These would not be expected
to increase in size over
a short period of time,
so we can rule that out too.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, so it's not B or C.
What else can you rule out?
[Dr. Handy] We can also
rule out, E. syphilis.
So remember, primary syphilis presents
with a chancre on the genitals,
so this would have to
be secondary syphilis.
The lesions of secondary syphilis
are initially pale red or pink
non-pruritic discrete macules
distributed on the trunk and extremities.
These macules progress to papular lesions
that are distributed widely
and that frequently involves
the palms and soles.
A syphilitic lesion would not be expected
to be a solitary isolated
lesion on the sole of the foot.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, well,
that leaves us with
acral lentiginous melanoma
and lentigo maligna melanoma.
Two types of melanoma.
Let's talk a little more
about melanomas broadly first
and then let's narrow it down.
[Dr. Handy] Yeah, given the gravity,
we must consider melanoma
in the differential
of any new skin lesion,
particularly, a pigmented lesion.
Melanoma is an aggressive
malignancy of melanocytes,
pigment-producing cells that originate
from the neural crest
and migrate to the skin,
meninges, mucous membranes,
the upper esophagus, and eyes.
Melanocytes in each of these locations
have the potential for
malignant transformation,
but the vast majority of
melanomas arise in the skin,
often permitting detection at a time
when complete surgical
excision leads to cure.
Cutaneous melanoma can occur in people
of all ages and all colors.
Clinical features that
confer an increased risk
for melanoma include
vulnerability to sun damage,
so that's with light coloration
of the skin, hair, or eyes;
photodamaged skin or history of exposure
to lots of UV rays;
abnormal growth of melanocytes
and immunosuppression.
[Dr. Wiener] Tell me
about the different types
of melanoma, two are mentioned here.
As you mentioned, sun exposure
is a major risk factor,
but this lesion is on
the bottom of his foot,
not a common place, or people
don't let the sun shine
on the bottom of their feet that often.
[Dr. Handy] Yeah, lentigo
maligna melanoma occurs
on sun-exposed skin as a large,
hyperpigmented macule or plaque
with irregular borders
and variable pigmentation.
As the bottom of the foot
is not a skin-exposed area,
this is less likely in this case.
Now, acral lentiginous melanoma
is the most common melanoma in Blacks,
Asians, and Hispanics and occurs
as an enlarging hyperpigmented macule
or plaque on the palms and soles.
In non-white populations,
the frequency of acral and
mucosal melanomas is much higher;
the incidence of melanoma in Black
and Hispanic populations is not associated
with UV light exposure.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, so the
answer to this question is
A. acral lentiginous melanoma.
What would be the next step?
[Dr. Handy] Any pigmented cutaneous lesion
that has changed in size or shape
or has other features suggestive
of malignant melanoma is
a candidate for biopsy.
An excisional biopsy with 1-3
millimeter margins is suggested.
This facilitates histologic
assessment of the lesions
and you can also get a measurement
of thickness if the lesion is melanoma,
and it constitutes definitive treatment
if the lesion is benign.
For lesions that are
larger on anatomic sites
where excisional biopsy
may not be feasible,
an incisional biopsy or partial biopsy
through the most nodular
or the darkest area
of the lesion is acceptable.
This doesn't appear to facilitate
the spread of melanoma.
For suspicious lesions,
though, every attempt
should be made to get the deep
and peripheral margins to
perform immunohistochemistry,
since that's important to
the staging of melanoma
and deciding on the next
steps if it is melanoma.
[Dr. Wiener] So for this man,
the next step would be a biopsy.
[Dr. Handy] That's right.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, so the
teaching points in this case
are that any changing skin lesions
should be considered melanoma
until proven otherwise.
Generally speaking, there
are two forms of melanoma.
Lentigo malignant
melanoma typically occurs
in sun-exposed areas, whereas
acral lentiginous melanoma,
which is more common in
Blacks, Asians, and Hispanics,
may occur on the palms and the soles.
[Dr. Handy] You can
find questions like this
and this question in the
Harrison's Review Questions,
and learn more about this in
the chapter on skin cancer.
Visit the show notes for
links to helpful resources,
including related chapters
and review questions from Harrison's.
And thank you so much for listening.
If you enjoyed this episode,
please leave us a review
so we can reach more
listeners just like you.
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