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ARTICLE |

Cancer of the Nail Bed

P. M. Inlow, MD
JAMA. 1979;241(3):239. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290290013008.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor.—  I agree with Long and Espiniella (239:2154,1978) that cancer of the nail bed is more frequent than the literature would indicate. I am a radiologist from a small town in Indiana (Shelbyville, population 15,000) and in 16 years of practice have had two patients, both men, with biopsy-proved squamous cell cancer of the nail bed. The men, aged 59 and 60 years, are both from this county and had had the lesion for several years. One of the patients had a growth of the left thumbnail for 25 years, which had been treated by fulguration on two previous occasions. The other patient had a lesion of the left index finger. Since there was no evidence of bone invasion, they were treated by x-ray therapy to include the interphalangeal joint of the thumb and to the proximal interphalangeal joint of the finger. They are tumor free six and

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