Acral lentiginous melanoma is a type of skin cancer.[6] It typically begins as a uniform brownish mark before becoming darker and wider with a blurred irregular edge, most frequently seen in the foot of a person with darker skin.[6] It may become bumpy and ulcerate.[6] Just under the nail it typically appears as dark longitudinal streaks, and it may spread.[7]
Melanoma is a group of serious skin cancers that arise from pigment cells (melanocytes); acral lentiginous melanoma is a kind of lentiginous[8] skin melanoma.[6] Acral lentiginous melanoma is the most common subtype in people with darker skins and is rare in people with lighter skin types.[7] It is not caused by exposure to sunlight or UV radiation, and wearing sunscreen does not protect against it. Acral lentiginous melanoma is commonly found on the palms, soles, under the nails, and in the oral mucosa. It occurs on non-hair-bearing surfaces of the body, which have not necessarily been exposed to sunlight. It is also found on mucous membranes.[9]
The absolute incidence of ALM is the same for people of all skin colors, and has not changed significantly for decades.[9] However, because rates of other melanomas are low in non-white populations, ALM is the most common form of melanoma diagnosed amongst Asian and sub-Saharan African ethnic groups.[10] The average age at diagnosis is between sixty and seventy years.[11]
Warning signs are new areas of pigmentation, or existing pigmentation that shows change. If caught early, acral lentiginous melanoma has a similar cure rate as the other types of superficial spreading melanoma.[12]
Causes
Acral lentiginous melanoma is a result of malignant melanocytes at the membrane of the skin (outer layers).[2][3] The pathogenesis of acral lentiginous melanoma remains unknown at this time.[13] It is not caused by sunlight or UV radiation.[9]
Diagnosis
Although the ideal method of diagnosis of melanoma is complete excisional biopsy,[14] alternatives may be required according to the location of the melanoma. Dermatoscopy of acral pigmented lesions is very difficult but can be accomplished with diligent focus. Initial confirmation of the suspicion can be done with a small wedge biopsy or small punch biopsy.[4] Thin deep wedge biopsies can heal very well on acral skin, and small punch biopsies can give enough clue to the malignant nature of the lesion. Once this confirmatory biopsy is done, a second complete excisional skin biopsy can be performed with a narrow surgical margin (1 mm). This second biopsy will determine the depth and invasiveness of the melanoma,[15] and will help to define what the final treatment will be. If the melanoma involves the nail fold and the nail bed, complete excision of the nail unit might be required. Final treatment might require wider excision (margins of 0.5 cm or more), digital amputation, lymphangiogram with lymph node dissection, or chemotherapy.[16]
Histology
The main characteristic of acral lentiginous melanoma is continuous proliferation of atypical melanocytes at the dermoepidermal junction.[17] Other histological signs of acral lentiginous melanoma include dermal invasion and desmoplasia.[18]
According to Scolyer et al.,[19] ALM "is usually characterized in its earliest recognisable form as single atypical melanocytes scattered along the junctional epidermal layer".
Treatment
Therapies for metastatic melanoma include the biologic immunotherapy agents ipilimumab, pembrolizumab, and nivolumab; BRAF inhibitors, such as vemurafenib and dabrafenib; and a MEK inhibitor trametinib.[5]
When arising in the nailbed of a digit, the evidence suggests that digit-sparing surgery (wide excision and grafting) has similar outcomes to amputation,[20] therefore, to preserve function it is recommended that clinicians default to digit-sparing surgery and if the margins are involved or patients develop recurrence, then secondary amputation can be considered.
Prognosis
It has been demonstrated that acral lentiginous melanoma has a poorer prognosis compared to that of cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM).[21]
Society and culture
Jamaican musician Bob Marley died of the condition in 1981, at the age of 36.[22]
^Phan A, Touzet S, Dalle S, Ronger-Savlé S, Balme B, Thomas L (August 2007). "Acral lentiginous melanoma: histopathological prognostic features of 121 cases". British Journal of Dermatology. 157 (2): 311–318. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2133.2007.08031.x. PMID17596173. S2CID40412082.
Durbec F, Martin L, Derancourt C, Grange F (April 2012). "Melanoma of the hand and foot: epidemiological, prognostic and genetic features. A systematic review: Melanoma of the hand and foot". British Journal of Dermatology. 166 (4): 727–739. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2133.2011.10772.x. PMID22175696. S2CID5463667.