[Skin carcinoma of the face: surgery or radiotherapy?].

Rev Stomatol Chir Maxillofac

Service de Dermatologie, CHU Tours.

Published: November 1990

Surgical exeresis and radiation therapy are effective means of treatment for facial carcinomas. In some areas that are difficult to manage (nose, ears, periorbital region), the respective importance of both approaches is discussed. We report on the retrospective study of 309 patients seen after a skin carcinology consultation in which a dermatologist, a surgeon and a radiotherapist were associated. These 309 patients, with a mean age of 73 years, presented with 375 carcinomas, i.e. 246 basal-cell (BC) and 119 epidermoid (EC) carcinomas. The most frequent sites were the nose (33.8% of BC), the inner canthus (12.7% of BC), the lower lip (23.8% of EC) and the ear (15.6% of EC). Management mainly consisted of surgery (50.8%) then Curie therapy (37%). The rate of recurrence was the same (10.5%) after surgery and radiation therapy. The study of the results leads us to advocating surgery for carcinomas of the ear (due to the occurrence of radiation necrosis in every third case after radiation therapy) and Curie therapy for carcinomas of the lower lid (except the inner canthus) because of recurrence in every second case treated with surgery. We currently prefer surgery for carcinomas of the lower lip (radiodermatitis in 11.8% of cases) and Curie therapy for the nose (lower rate of recurrence than with surgery). However, in the last two cases, the proposals for treatment should be confirmed by randomized studies. Thus facial carcinomas of the skin surrounding the orifices of the face and/or those that affect patients who are difficult to treat must be seen during a skin carcinology consultation by a dermatologist, a surgeon and a radiotherapist working together.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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