The lesion that kept coming back
A 67-year-old man walked into a hospital with a familiar problem. A skin patch on his scrotum had grown larger and started leaking fluid.
He had been here before — three times, in fact. Doctors had cut out similar lesions in the past.
Each time, they grew back.
The man had scrotal Paget's disease — a rare skin cancer that can start in sweat glands. Because it looks like eczema or a fungal rash, it often gets brushed off for years.
Most men have never heard of it. Even some doctors miss it on the first visit.
That delay matters. The longer this cancer sits, the deeper it can spread into nearby tissue and, in some cases, the lymph system.
The old way doctors saw this
For decades, stubborn groin or scrotal rashes got treated with creams. Steroids. Antifungals. A quick shave biopsy if things got worse.
If cancer was suspected, surgeons cut out the visible patch and hoped for the best.
But here's the twist — these lesions often spread underground. The cancer cells can reach well beyond the red patch you can see.
Hidden roots under the surface
Think of this cancer like a weed. The part above the soil is obvious. The roots below? They can stretch in every direction.
That's why simple removal often fails. Cells left behind regrow months or years later.
Modern care uses a tool called dermoscopy — a magnifying device that spots tell-tale patterns. In this patient, doctors saw a "red background with punctate vessels," a clue pointing to Paget's disease.
Doctors took a small sample first and confirmed the diagnosis. Then they planned a wide excision — cutting out the lesion plus a healthy margin around it.
During surgery, they tested the edges in real time with frozen section analysis. Cancer cells were still present at four spots on the border.
So they kept cutting until the edges came back clean.
The lab confirms the source
Lab tests showed the cancer cells came from sweat glands. Two proteins — CK7 and GCDFP-15 — pointed to that origin.
A third marker, D2-40, showed the cancer had the potential to spread through lymph channels.
That's a warning sign doctors take seriously.
A rash that heals with cream does not need a biopsy. A rash that keeps coming back does.
Why this report matters
This isn't a randomized trial. It's one patient's journey — what doctors call a case report.
But case reports like this one teach a generation of surgeons how to spot, cut, and follow up on a disease most will see only a handful of times in a career.
Scrotal Paget's disease sits in an awkward medical corner. It's too rare for large trials, but common enough that most urologists will encounter it.
Experts now favor intraoperative margin checking — testing tissue edges while the patient is still on the operating table. That way, no one leaves with cancer cells still hiding at the border.
Regular follow-up visits are also key. Recurrence can show up years later.
If you or a loved one has a skin patch in the groin, scrotum, or genital area that doesn't heal after weeks of treatment — ask for a biopsy.
Don't feel embarrassed. Dermatologists and urologists see these concerns every day.
Most patches turn out to be harmless. But the ones that aren't need early action.
This is a single case. Case reports raise hypotheses and teach technique — they don't prove what works best for every patient.
Larger studies are needed to pin down survival rates and the best follow-up schedule.
Researchers are exploring newer tools — like Mohs surgery, where skin is removed layer by layer with microscope checks between each slice. Targeted drugs for tough cases are also under study.
For now, the main lesson is simple. Rare doesn't mean impossible. If something on your skin keeps coming back, keep asking questions.