IntroductionThe use of vemurafenib in melanoma has improved the survival of patients; however, it is associated with skin toxicities.AimTo assess skin toxicities by dermoscopy in patients treated with vemurafenib.Material and methodsEight patients with BRAF V600 mutation positive metastatic melanoma were examined dermoscopically during vemurafenib treatment. All skin lesions occurring during therapy were assessed clinically and dermoscopically using a hand-held dermoscope with polarised and non-polarised light. Skin lesions suspected for malignancy appearing during therapy were totally surgically excised with consecutive histopathological examination.ResultsAll 8 examined patients developed skin toxicity. The majority of patients (7/8) presented G1 skin toxicity according to CTCAE version 4.3. Only 1 of them had G2 skin toxicity. The most common dermoscopy findings in our study were hyperkeratotic verrucas in 5 patients (5/8) with structureless pattern. In some of them we also observed central dots, exophytic proliferation, hairpin vessels and homogeneous haemorrhage. Other findings were hyperkeratosis of the nipples (5/8) with brownish to yellowish, angular clods with a tendency to be more confluent in dermoscopy. Palmar plantar erythrodysaesthesia (3/8) showed dermoscopically a yellowish, homogeneous pattern. Four melanocytic skin lesions in 2 patients were surgically excised due to suspected malignant transformation. In most of them we observed an atypical pigmented network (abrupt cut-off, big holes), atypical globules and a homogeneous blue pattern; however, histopathological diagnosis excluded any malignancy.ConclusionsDermoscopy seems to be an easily performed and valuable method for assessment of skin toxicities during oncological therapy, at any time of the treatment.