If This Happens To Your Fingers, You Might Have Cancer

When we observe strange things happening to our body parts, it's understandable to be concerned. But there are also some bodily irregularities that aren't quite as alarming, simply because so many things in our environments can cause them. 

Take dry, cracked, and peeling skin, for example. Medically known as xerosis cutis, xeroderma, or just xerosis, this condition is fairly common, can be observed on different parts of the body (but typically on the upper and lower extremities), and increases in likelihood as a person ages. Some of the known causes of dry skin include frequent or excessive handwashing, exposure to extremely hot or cold climates, extended sun exposure, and even certain medications. 

Occasionally, having dry, cracked skin on your hands and fingers may point to a medical condition. Some say that in rare cases, a person with cracked fingertips may have cancer. (Incidentally, red skin may also be a cancer warning sign.) However, while this may sometimes be true, the connection between the two conditions isn't necessarily causal; sometimes, cracked fingers aren't so much a cancer symptom as they are a side effect of treatment.

Cancer-related causes of dry, cracked fingers

In an interview with the MD Anderson Cancer Center, Dr. Saira George, a dermatologist, shared how specific types of cancer may make themselves known through visible changes on a person's fingers. 

Squamous cell carcinoma, for instance, many manifest as rough, scaly skin patches, while basal cell cancers may lead to skin crusts and scabs. (Both of these cancers are types that your eyes can also help diagnose.) Non-Hodgkin lymphoma may also cause scaly patches across different body parts, while rashes could indicate paraneoplastic skin disorders, which are themselves possible cancer indicators. With that said, George clarifies: "Most dry, scaly areas of skin aren't due to cancer." (Read about the different causes, types, and treatments pertaining to skin cancer.)

Per the National Cancer Institute, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and targeted therapy may all cause cracking and dryness, not just on the skin of your fingers but also on your nails.

Your dry, cracked fingers could mean something else

While there is wisdom in consulting a medical professional the moment you observe any unwelcome changes in your body, having cracked and dry skin on your fingertips should not automatically send you into a cancer scare. Still, this could be a sign of a nascent, developing, or undiagnosed medical disorder.

Unsurprisingly, the most common disease-related cause of cracked fingertip skin would be a skin condition. Eczema is typically observed on the fingertips but can also happen in other areas of the body; scaly skin and rashes are a telltale sign of this uncomfortable skin inflammation. Meanwhile, an autoimmune disorder, psoriasis, can cause dry, flaky, itchy, and even painful patches on the skin.

Other potential causes of skin dryness and cracking, whether on the fingertips or elsewhere, are diabetes, fungal infection, and a deficiency in vitamin A, vitamin B3 (niacin), vitamin D, iron, or zinc.