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Five-year results of curettage-cryosurgery for 100 consecutive auricular non-melanoma skin cancers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2006

Peter Nordin
Affiliation:
Departments of Dermatology, Frölunda Specialist Hospital and Lundby Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Bo Stenquist
Affiliation:
Departments of Dermatology, Frölunda Specialist Hospital and Lundby Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden.

Abstract

Large excisions or Mohs’ micrographic surgery (MMS) are often the suggested treatments for non-melanoma skin cancers (NMSCs) of the external ear. This five-year follow-up attempts to evaluate whether curettage-cryosurgery could be an alternative therapy for selected auricular NMSCs.

One hundred auricular NMSCs, selected at a skin tumour clinic, were treated by a thorough curettage, with different-sized curettes, followed by cryosurgery in a double freeze-thaw cycle. Seventy-seven basal cell carcinomas (BCCs), 13 squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs), six SCCs in situ, and four basosquamous carcinomas were included. The mean diameter of the tumours was 18 mm (range 5–70). Morphoeiform BCCs, recurrent BCCs with fibrotic component, and most of the SCCs were selected for MMS.

Seventy-one patients with 81 tumours were followed-up for at least five years with only one recurrence. Nineteen patients with 19 tumours, followed-up for two to four years, died from other causes with no sign of recurrence at their last visit. Patients followed-up for less than two years were excluded. No major problems were registered after treatment. The cosmetic result was good or acceptable in most patients.

In carefully selected patients a thorough curettage followed by freezing with liquid nitrogen in a double freeze-thaw cycle could be a safe and inexpensive therapy even for large NMSCs of the external ear.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Royal Society of Medicine Press Limited 2002

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