Abstract

There have been few studies that have compared the outcome of treatment of melanoma on the sole and dorsum of the foot or defined their prognostic factors. We describe 44 white patients (30 women and 14 men, mean age 53 years) with melanoma on the foot (sole, n = 25, dorsum, n = 19) seen over a 15 year period. Forty patients presented with stage I, two with stage II, one with stage III, and one with stage IV disease. The median Breslow depth of penetration was 2.8 mm (sole 3.3, dorsum 2.3). Of the 40 patients with stage I disease, 34 patients (17 dorsum, 17 sole) were treated by wide local excision (2 cm or more) and none developed local recurrence. Six patients (five sole, one dorsum) who had narrow excision margins (less than 1 cm, stage I disease) developed local recurrences. Ten patients underwent prophylactic hyperthermic limb perfusion. Sixteen patients with stage I disease (10 sole, six dorsum) developed metastases in the inguinal nodes. All 16 underwent block dissection of the nodes and five are alive. The overall survival for both dorsum (73%) and sole (66%) (stage I disease) was similar at 60 months. Both patients with stage II disease were alive at the time of writing, but the two patients with stage III and IV disease had died. The foot is an anatomical subsite associated with a poor prognosis for melanoma. There is little difference in prognostic factors and outcome between the sole and dorsum.

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