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