AI Article Synopsis

  • Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is a slow-growing skin tumor that typically requires surgical excision for treatment, particularly on the face, where reconstruction can be complex.
  • A retrospective study of 32 patients treated for facial BCC at a hospital was conducted, alongside a literature review that identified 218 relevant journal articles, leading to the creation of a reconstruction algorithm.
  • Effective reconstruction of facial defects post-BCC surgery depends on understanding esthetic principles, flap anatomy, and the surgeon's experience, with more intricate cases often requiring advanced techniques and a collaborative approach.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is a locally invasive, slowly spreading tumor arising in the basal layer of epidermis and rarely metastasizes. Surgical excision with adequate margins is curative. Reconstruction of post-excisional defects on the face is both essential and challenging.

Clinical Cases And Methods: A retrospective review of hospital records for patients operated for BCC of the face excluding the pinna at our institute in the last 3 years was done and a review of the literature was carried out to identify the most common principles governing the optimal reconstruction of post-excisional defects on the face. Literature search was made in Embase, Medline, and Cochrane databases in the last two decades with the filters placed for human and English language studies with the search terms (Facial Basal cell carcinoma) AND reconstruction AND (Humans[Mesh]).

Results: Records of 32 patients with facial BCC who underwent excision and reconstruction at our hospital were identified and details were recorded. Our literature search with the terms and filters mentioned above revealed 244 studies with duplicates removed. After further hand-searching, 218 journal articles were identified, reviewed, and a reconstruction algorithm was designed based on the findings.

Discussion: Reconstruction of post-BCC excisional defects of the face relies on an adequate understanding of the general principles of reconstruction, subunit principle of facial esthetics, flap anatomy and vascularity as well as operator experience. Complex defects need innovative solutions, multidisciplinary approaches, and newer methods of reconstruction like perforator flaps and newer techniques like supermicrosurgery.

Conclusion: Multiple reconstructive options for post-excisional defects of the BCC over the face are available and most defects can be approached in an algorithmic manner. Further well-designed prospective research studies are needed to compare outcomes of different reconstructive options for a given defect and identify the most suitable options.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10298610PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/JCAS.JCAS_87_21DOI Listing

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