Skin Cancer Research - Identification, Causes, Prevention, Treatment

Skin Cancer Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Skin Cancer, including details on identification, causes, prevention, treatment.


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Management of periocular basal and squamous cell carcinoma: a series of 485 cases.

Nemet AY, Deckel Y, Martin PA, Kourt G, Chilov M, Sharma V, Benger R

Oculoplastic Unit, Department of Ophthalmology, Sydney Hospital and Sydney Eye Hospital, Macquarie Street, Sydney, NSW, Australia. nemeta@yahoo.com

PURPOSE: To analyze the outcome of management of patients with basal cell carcinomas (BCCs) and squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) in a tertiary referral eye center in Sydney, Australia. DESIGN: Retrospective case series. METHODS: Review of medical records of 485 consecutive cases (469 patients) with confirmed eyelid cancer. Intervention procedures: Surgical excision with 3- to 5-mm clinically clear margins and histologic confirmation of the surgical margins. Frozen section histology or Mohs' micrographic surgery (MMS) was used for incompletely excised cases, and those located in the medial canthus or close to the lacrimal drainage system. Standard reconstruction techniques were employed. Main outcome measures: Survival period free of tumor, incomplete excision, recurrences, type of closure, and complications. RESULTS: Excision was initially incomplete in 25.4% of all tumors. Morpheaform type of BCC (chi(2)P < .001), and medial canthus location BCCs (chi(2)P < .05) were associated with a higher incomplete resection rate. A 35.9% incomplete excision rate was associated with a significantly higher recurrence rate compared with complete excision (8.4% and 4.6%, respectively, chi(2)P < .05). Twenty-seven patients (5.6%) had a recurrent tumor. After incomplete excision, there was no recurrence with MMS, but 4.7% recurrence rate when frozen section technique was used (P < .05). Local postoperative complications occurred in 41 patients (8.5%). CONCLUSIONS: In the setting of a tertiary referral center, incomplete primary resection of an eyelid skin cancer is the main risk factor for recurrence. Incomplete resection is significantly associated with medial canthus location and morpheaform type of BCC and with moderately differentiated SCC. MMS is the safer technique after incomplete tumor excision.

Published 31 July 2006 in Am J Ophthalmol, 142(2): 293-7.
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Skin Cancer Books

Pathology of Vascular Skin Lesions (Current Clinical Pathology) (Current Clinical Pathology)

Pathology of Vascular Skin Lesions (Current Clinical Pathology) (Current Clinical Pathology)