A case of cutaneous malignant melanoma with rare in-transit metastasis

Yagnya Darshit Dalal, Archana Darshit Dalal

PAMJ-CM. 2024; 14:38. Published 09 Apr 2024 | doi:10.11604/pamj-cm.2024.14.38.43179

A 43-year-old male auto-rickshaw driver presented to a tertiary hospital with a black-coloured mass on the dorsum of his left hand for the past 6 months. Initially, it was a small black nodule which had rapidly progressed to attain the current size. There was a history of occasional small amounts of bleeding from the mass spontaneously and on light touch. There was no history of trauma. He had consulted a community health centre and was suspected of having arteriovenous malformation for which he was advised a Doppler study. Doppler ultrasonography showed the presence of a highly vascularised solitary tumour on the dorsum of his left hand. On examination, he had a 4x3x10 cm-sized exophytic, spongy, black-coloured tumour (A) which bled slightly on touch. There was possible involvement of the underlying tendon. There was visible and palpable left axillary lymphadenopathy (B). Computed tomography (CT) scan of the left upper limb showed enlarged axillary as well as brachial lymph nodes with possible metastasis. A punch biopsy of the primary tumour and fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) of the axillary lymph nodes was done. Histopathology confirmed the diagnosis of malignant melanoma (C). Fine needle aspiration cytology was suggestive of axillary nodal metastasis. A PET scan revealed the presence of metastasis in humeral and axillary basins (D); suggestive of classical in-transit metastasis of cutaneous malignant melanoma. The patient was referred to a cancer hospital for further management.
Corresponding author
Yagnya Darshit Dalal, Department of General Surgery; GCS Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre, Ahmedabad, India (yagnya1699@gmail.com)

This image

  • HTML
  • PDF in process
Articles published in PAMJ-CM are Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).

eISSN: 2707-2797


The PAMJ - Clinical Medicine (ISSN: 2707-2797) is a subsidiary of the Pan African Medical Journal. The contents of this journal is intended exclusively for professionals in the medical, paramedical and public health and other health sectors.

Currently tracked by: DOAJ, AIM, Google Scholar, AJOL, EBSCO, Scopus, Embase, IC, HINARI, Global Health, PubMed Central, PubMed/Medline, ESCI

Physical address: Kenya: 3rd Floor, Park Suite Building, Parkland Road, Nairobi. PoBox 38583-00100, tel: +254 (0)20-520-4356 | Cameroon: Immeuble TechnoPark Essos, Yaounde, PoBox: 10020 Yaounde, tel: +237 (0)24-309-5880