DÄ internationalArchive11/2024Palmar Skin Changes (Tripe Palms)—an Early Paraneoplastic Warning Sign

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Palmar Skin Changes (Tripe Palms)—an Early Paraneoplastic Warning Sign

Dtsch Arztebl Int 2024; 121: 372. DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.m2023.0187

Obermeier, P E; Hillen, U

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Tripe palm (including magnified section), (1) velvety white hyperkeratosis, (2) palmar crease formation, and (3) cobblestone pattern
Figure
Tripe palm (including magnified section), (1) velvety white hyperkeratosis, (2) palmar crease formation, and (3) cobblestone pattern

A 66-year-old female patient presented with a ≈ 1-year history of cracked palms. Emollients and topical glucocorticoids had failed to improve the findings. From a clinical perspective, marked palmar crease formation with cobblestone pattern, velvety white hyperkeratosis, and axillary acanthosis nigricans were striking. The patient was known to have a history of endometrial adenocarcinoma, for which which she had undergone R0 resection a good 3 years previously. Due to parailiac and retroperitoneal lymph node recurrence 2 years later, the patient had received paclitaxel/carboplatin chemotherapy. Treatment was switched to pembrolizumab as a result of tumor progression and microsatellite instability. As is often the case in this patient population, pembrolizumab significantly reduced tumor size in our patient at good tolerability (KEYNOTE-158). The palmar skin lesions had manifested 6 months prior to the diagnosis of lymph node recurrence. The nature and appearance of this rare facultative paraneoplastic dermatosis gave rise to the designation “tripe palms.” In 7/10 of cases, tripe palms coincide with acanthosis nigricans, while in 9/10 cases they are associated with primarily gastrointestinal, pulmonary, or gynecological adenocarcinomas. In just under 5/10 cases, tripe palms precede the malignancy as a warning sign worthy of comprehensive investigation.

Patrick E. Obermeier, PhD; Prof. Dr. Uwe Hillen, Vivantes Klinikum Neukölln, Dermatologie und Venerologie, Berlin, p.e.obermeier@gmail.com

Conflict of interest statement: The authors state that no conflict of interest exists.

Translated from the original German by Christine Rye.

Cite this as: Obermeier P, Hillen U: Palmar skin changes (tripe palms)—an early paraneoplastic warning sign. Dtsch Arztebl Int 2024; 121: 372a. DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.m2023.0187

Tripe palm (including magnified section), (1) velvety white hyperkeratosis, (2) palmar crease formation, and (3) cobblestone pattern
Figure
Tripe palm (including magnified section), (1) velvety white hyperkeratosis, (2) palmar crease formation, and (3) cobblestone pattern