367659

Nonmelanoma facial skin cancer: surgical planning for resection and reconstruction

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Last updated: 05 Jan 2025

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Abstract

Introduction
The most effective treatment for nonmelanotic fascial skin cancer is surgical excision. Preoperative planning and a thorough grasp of reconstructive procedures, such as primary closure skin grafting, locoregional tissue flaps, remote tissue flaps, and free tissue transfer, are essential for the surgical therapy of these tumors. The choice of nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) therapy is very specific to each patient and is influenced by the patient's age, size, histologic subtype, and location of the disease. Treatment is to obliterate the lesion while maintaining normal tissue, function, and appearance. The ideas and methods of surgical excision and reconstruction of skin malignancies unique to the face were covered in this study.
Patients and methods
This study involved 98 patients of various ages and sexes. Of them, 89% had basal cell carcinoma and 11% had squamous cell carcinoma, both low-and high-risk tumors with varying sizes, locations, and histological subtypes. A safety margin of 3–5 mm is used for excision of low-risk malignancies and 5–10 mm for high-risk cancers. In 17 patients, skin grafts (split-thickness skin grafts and full-thickness skin grafts) are employed. 56 patients underwent local advancement, transposition, and rotational flaps; 15 patients underwent regional interpolation flaps; 6 patients sustained neck lymph node infiltration so they underwent cervical block dissection and distant pedicled flaps as latissimus dorsi muscle flaps; and 4 patients underwent cervical block dissection and free tissue transfer.
Results
Six patients experienced problems in the form of two partial graft and flap losses, two wound infections, and one scar retraction; however, with targeted care, they recovered well. Ninety-two percent of patients found the cosmetic outcomes satisfactory, and the functional outcome was good.
Conclusion
Wide excision and appropriate surgical reconstruction are ideal treatment modalities and may yield good aesthetic results or functional outcome, also the use of split-thickness skin grafts does not come as a first priority, where a lot of cases could have been treated with local flaps, as demonstrated in this consecutive series of treated patients. Treatment of NMSC on the face required a basic knowledge, presents a challenge to plastic surgeons, and is based on achieving the best oncological, functional, and cosmetic result. It is crucial to emphasize the need of patient education and appropriate tumor monitoring after NMSC therapy. A review of a big series of facial malignancy that may guide further studies cannot be understated.

DOI

10.4103/ejs.ejs_294_23

Keywords

nonmelanoma, Reconstruction, Surgery

Authors

First Name

Nasr

Last Name

Al-Qadasi

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First Name

Yahia

Last Name

Al-Sayaghi

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Orcid

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First Name

Abdullfatah

Last Name

Al-tam

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Orcid

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First Name

Raddad

Last Name

AL-Fakih

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Volume

43

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

49237

Issue Date

2024-04-01

Receive Date

2023-11-30

Publish Date

2024-03-22

Print ISSN

1110-1121

Online ISSN

1687-7624

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https://ejsur.journals.ekb.eg/article_367659.html

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https://ejsur.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=367659

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367,659

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Journal of Surgery

Publication Link

https://ejsur.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Nonmelanoma facial skin cancer: surgical planning for resection and reconstruction

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Article

Created At

21 Dec 2024