• Home
  • Practice Focus
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
    • How I Do It
    • TRIO Best Practices
  • Business of Medicine
    • Health Policy
    • Legal Matters
    • Practice Management
    • Tech Talk
    • AI
  • Literature Reviews
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
  • Career
    • Medical Education
    • Professional Development
    • Resident Focus
  • ENT Perspectives
    • ENT Expressions
    • Everyday Ethics
    • From TRIO
    • The Great Debate
    • Letter From the Editor
    • Rx: Wellness
    • The Voice
    • Viewpoint
  • TRIO Resources
    • Triological Society
    • The Laryngoscope
    • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
    • TRIO Combined Sections Meetings
    • COSM
    • Related Otolaryngology Events
  • Search

SM14: Cases of Aggressive Skin Carcinoma Raise Treatment, Management Questions for Otolaryngologists

by Thomas R. Collins • February 5, 2014

  • Tweet
  • Email
Print-Friendly Version

You Might Also Like

  • The Imperative for Multidisciplinary Management of Aggressive Cutaneous Squamous Head and Neck Carcinoma
  • Experts Discuss Treatment Options for Skin Cancer Cases
  • SM14: Treatment for Thyroid Tumors and Benefits of Hearing Devices Spark Debate Among Otolaryngologists
  • Dermatologists, Otolaryngologists Differ on Skin Cancer Care
Explore This Issue
February 2014

One challenge in aggressive skin cancer cases is getting enough information on the pathology to determine the best course of treatment.

A healthy, 47-year-old woman from a rural, isolated area presents to your center with a nose lesion that a previous biopsy says is basal cell carcinoma. What is the best way to treat and manage this patient?

A panel here at the Triological Society Combined Sections Meeting reviewed the case in a session on aggressive skin carcinomas. The panelists generally agreed that they would have the pathology reviewed at their own center before proceeding to surgery.

The moderator, Dale Brown, MD, professor of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the University of Toronto, then unveiled the post-surgery photo. To get clear margins, much of the woman’s tissue was lost, perhaps more than anticipated.

Much of the discussion on the case centered on how much reconstruction to do on the patient and how quickly, given the chance of recurrence:

  • Keyvan Nouri, MD, chief of dermatology services at the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center in Miami, said he’d be inclined to wait several years. “There is a risk that it may come back, so I would try to do some sort of construction that’s not going to mask the tumor so it would be easy to actually watch this area for some time,” he said. “I would say for five years maybe.” He might do more minor work right away and would consider a prosthesis but would wait longer for a fuller, “more elegant” procedure. The risk in major reconstruction right away is that the tumor might grow back beneath scar tissue, going unseen until it’s too late, he added.
  • Patrick Gullane, MD, chair of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the University of Toronto, said he might wait six months before reconstruction. “You can sit with the patient and discuss the options with her and try to paint a picture that a prosthesis long term may be better actually and may look better than some free tissue transfer,” he said.
  • Carol Bradford, MD, chair of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, said some patients might be more demanding of reconstruction than others. “If it was one of us, it’s going to be a huge impact on that individual’s quality of life, so I think it centers on the goals of care, the risks of recurrence versus the suboptimal, potentially, result of not doing early reconstruction,” she said.

Cancer on the Ear Raises Questions of Occult Metastases

Another case involved an elderly man with significant but fairly typical co-morbidities who was found to have squamous cell carcinoma in the conchal bowl, with cartilage involved.

    • Sandro Stoeckli, MD, chair of otorhinolaryngology at the University of Zurich, said he would initially have an ultrasound done, without ruling out a CT or an MRI, or both.
    • Dr. Bradford said she would go straight for a CT with contrast. “These patients have an unusually high risk of occult nodal metastases,” she said. “Even if there is no clear sign of regional adenopathy, the patient is still at risk.”
    • Dr. Nouri, who specializes in Mohs surgery, said this might not be the best choice for that approach. “The tumor has to grow in a continuous fashion,” he said. “If it doesn’t grow in a continuous fashion or if you think there is a role for micrometastases, it may not work, because you’re not going to be able to histologically accurately assess the Mohs section.”
From the Audience: “[This session highlighted] the need to treat aggressively for auricular squamous cell carcinomas, including consideration of management of the lymph nodes. It’s certainly important not to underestimate the aggressiveness of those lesions.”

——Francisco Civantos, MD University of Miami
  • Brian Moore, MD, of the Gayle and Tom Benson Cancer Center in New Orleans, said one of the challenges in these cases is getting enough information on the pathology to determine the best course. “With head and neck cutaneous squamous cell cancer, we’re a little bit limited by our pathologists and our dermatopathology reports for the biopsy,” he said. “[When] we get a melanoma patient, we get a lot of information. And so then (in contrast), we know immediately that this is a patient who needs a sentinel lymph node biopsy…. The question really is, at your institutions, are you able to get your dermatopathologists to provide you that additional information so that, up front, we may target these patients with appropriate therapy?”

Dr. Bradford agreed that can be an issue but added, “This is a bulky tumor of the ear. Regardless of what our dermatopathologists say, we know that’s a highly aggressive tumor.” She cautioned, though, that a sentinel lymph node biopsy might not be as reliable when there’s “a lot of deep invasion.”

Pages: 1 2 | Multi-Page

Filed Under: Features, Head and Neck, Practice Focus Tagged With: carcinoma, CSM14Issue: February 2014

You Might Also Like:

  • The Imperative for Multidisciplinary Management of Aggressive Cutaneous Squamous Head and Neck Carcinoma
  • Experts Discuss Treatment Options for Skin Cancer Cases
  • SM14: Treatment for Thyroid Tumors and Benefits of Hearing Devices Spark Debate Among Otolaryngologists
  • Dermatologists, Otolaryngologists Differ on Skin Cancer Care

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The Triological SocietyENTtoday is a publication of The Triological Society.

Polls

Have you invented or patented something that betters the field of otolaryngology?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
  • Polls Archive

Top Articles for Residents

  • Applications Open for Resident Members of ENTtoday Edit Board
  • How To Provide Helpful Feedback To Residents
  • Call for Resident Bowl Questions
  • New Standardized Otolaryngology Curriculum Launching July 1 Should Be Valuable Resource For Physicians Around The World
  • Do Training Programs Give Otolaryngology Residents the Necessary Tools to Do Productive Research?
  • Popular this Week
  • Most Popular
  • Most Recent
    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • The Best Site for Pediatric TT Placement: OR or Office?

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • The Road Less Traveled—at Least by Otolaryngologists

    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Is Middle Ear Pressure Affected by Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Use?

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • Complications for When Physicians Change a Maiden Name

    • Leaky Pipes—Time to Focus on Our Foundations
    • You Are Among Friends: The Value Of Being In A Group
    • How To: Full Endoscopic Procedures of Total Parotidectomy
    • How To: Does Intralesional Steroid Injection Effectively Mitigate Vocal Fold Scarring in a Rabbit Model?
    • What Is the Optimal Anticoagulation in HGNS Surgery in Patients with High-Risk Cardiac Comorbidities?

Follow Us

  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • The Triological Society
  • The Laryngoscope
  • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookies

Wiley

Copyright © 2025 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies. ISSN 1559-4939