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Study findings support consideration of second biopsy for transected melanomas
Had their true Breslow depths been known before definitive surgery, sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsies and wider surgical margins would likely have been recommended.
The findings led the investigators to conclude that a second biopsy should be considered when the first one is transected to ensure surgical and other management decisions are based on an accurate Breslow depth.
A second biopsy is especially warranted for broadly transected biopsies and transected T1a tumors with gross residual tumor or pigment on preoperative exam; both scenarios significantly increased the risk of up-staging in the study, according to lead investigator James Duncan, MD, a Mohs surgery and dermatologic oncology fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
“Accurate staging of malignancies, especially melanoma, is critical to determine prognosis and the best treatment approach,” said Vishal Patel, MD, director of cutaneous oncology at George Washington University, Washington, when asked for comment.
“This study identifies how transected biopsies can underestimate a melanoma’s true depth and thus impact treatment and outcomes. The authors highlight that when a biopsy is transected, or there is notable pigment at the base, attempts should be taken to sample the remaining tumor prior to surgery so the accurate tumor depth can be determined and treatment options be fully discussed with the patient,” Dr. Patel said.
The Birmingham team reviewed invasive melanoma cases at their university from 2017 to 2019.
Almost half (49.6%) of the 726 melanomas they identified were transected on biopsy, which is in line with prior reports. About 60% of the patients were men and 98% were White; the average age was 63 years.
Of the 360 transected tumors, 49 (13.6%) had up-staging at final excision that “would have prompted discussion of alternate surgical treatment such as SLN biopsy or wider surgical margins,” the team said.
Of the 89 transected pT1a melanomas identified, 47.1% with gross residual tumor or pigment on preoperative physical examination were up-staged following excision versus 6.9% with no remaining pigment or tumor prior to surgery (P < .01).
Broadly transected tumors were up-staged in 21.7% of cases versus 4.9% of focally transected tumors (P = .038). The average increase in Breslow depth for broadly transected tumors was 1.03 mm versus 0.03 mm for focally transected lesions (P = .04).
Shave biopsies, ulceration, and lack of concern for melanoma at the initial biopsy were among the factors associated with a higher risk of transection.
Superficial spreading melanoma was the most common subtype. Tumors were evenly distributed between the head, neck, and extremities. The average Breslow depth was 1.51 mm, and the majority of tumors were pT1a or pT2a.
The review excluded melanoma in situ, recurrences, metastases, noncutaneous melanomas, and biopsies where deep margin status was unknown.
There was no funding for the study, and Dr. Duncan and Dr. Patel had no relevant disclosures.
Had their true Breslow depths been known before definitive surgery, sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsies and wider surgical margins would likely have been recommended.
The findings led the investigators to conclude that a second biopsy should be considered when the first one is transected to ensure surgical and other management decisions are based on an accurate Breslow depth.
A second biopsy is especially warranted for broadly transected biopsies and transected T1a tumors with gross residual tumor or pigment on preoperative exam; both scenarios significantly increased the risk of up-staging in the study, according to lead investigator James Duncan, MD, a Mohs surgery and dermatologic oncology fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
“Accurate staging of malignancies, especially melanoma, is critical to determine prognosis and the best treatment approach,” said Vishal Patel, MD, director of cutaneous oncology at George Washington University, Washington, when asked for comment.
“This study identifies how transected biopsies can underestimate a melanoma’s true depth and thus impact treatment and outcomes. The authors highlight that when a biopsy is transected, or there is notable pigment at the base, attempts should be taken to sample the remaining tumor prior to surgery so the accurate tumor depth can be determined and treatment options be fully discussed with the patient,” Dr. Patel said.
The Birmingham team reviewed invasive melanoma cases at their university from 2017 to 2019.
Almost half (49.6%) of the 726 melanomas they identified were transected on biopsy, which is in line with prior reports. About 60% of the patients were men and 98% were White; the average age was 63 years.
Of the 360 transected tumors, 49 (13.6%) had up-staging at final excision that “would have prompted discussion of alternate surgical treatment such as SLN biopsy or wider surgical margins,” the team said.
Of the 89 transected pT1a melanomas identified, 47.1% with gross residual tumor or pigment on preoperative physical examination were up-staged following excision versus 6.9% with no remaining pigment or tumor prior to surgery (P < .01).
Broadly transected tumors were up-staged in 21.7% of cases versus 4.9% of focally transected tumors (P = .038). The average increase in Breslow depth for broadly transected tumors was 1.03 mm versus 0.03 mm for focally transected lesions (P = .04).
Shave biopsies, ulceration, and lack of concern for melanoma at the initial biopsy were among the factors associated with a higher risk of transection.
Superficial spreading melanoma was the most common subtype. Tumors were evenly distributed between the head, neck, and extremities. The average Breslow depth was 1.51 mm, and the majority of tumors were pT1a or pT2a.
The review excluded melanoma in situ, recurrences, metastases, noncutaneous melanomas, and biopsies where deep margin status was unknown.
There was no funding for the study, and Dr. Duncan and Dr. Patel had no relevant disclosures.
Had their true Breslow depths been known before definitive surgery, sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsies and wider surgical margins would likely have been recommended.
The findings led the investigators to conclude that a second biopsy should be considered when the first one is transected to ensure surgical and other management decisions are based on an accurate Breslow depth.
A second biopsy is especially warranted for broadly transected biopsies and transected T1a tumors with gross residual tumor or pigment on preoperative exam; both scenarios significantly increased the risk of up-staging in the study, according to lead investigator James Duncan, MD, a Mohs surgery and dermatologic oncology fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
“Accurate staging of malignancies, especially melanoma, is critical to determine prognosis and the best treatment approach,” said Vishal Patel, MD, director of cutaneous oncology at George Washington University, Washington, when asked for comment.
“This study identifies how transected biopsies can underestimate a melanoma’s true depth and thus impact treatment and outcomes. The authors highlight that when a biopsy is transected, or there is notable pigment at the base, attempts should be taken to sample the remaining tumor prior to surgery so the accurate tumor depth can be determined and treatment options be fully discussed with the patient,” Dr. Patel said.
The Birmingham team reviewed invasive melanoma cases at their university from 2017 to 2019.
Almost half (49.6%) of the 726 melanomas they identified were transected on biopsy, which is in line with prior reports. About 60% of the patients were men and 98% were White; the average age was 63 years.
Of the 360 transected tumors, 49 (13.6%) had up-staging at final excision that “would have prompted discussion of alternate surgical treatment such as SLN biopsy or wider surgical margins,” the team said.
Of the 89 transected pT1a melanomas identified, 47.1% with gross residual tumor or pigment on preoperative physical examination were up-staged following excision versus 6.9% with no remaining pigment or tumor prior to surgery (P < .01).
Broadly transected tumors were up-staged in 21.7% of cases versus 4.9% of focally transected tumors (P = .038). The average increase in Breslow depth for broadly transected tumors was 1.03 mm versus 0.03 mm for focally transected lesions (P = .04).
Shave biopsies, ulceration, and lack of concern for melanoma at the initial biopsy were among the factors associated with a higher risk of transection.
Superficial spreading melanoma was the most common subtype. Tumors were evenly distributed between the head, neck, and extremities. The average Breslow depth was 1.51 mm, and the majority of tumors were pT1a or pT2a.
The review excluded melanoma in situ, recurrences, metastases, noncutaneous melanomas, and biopsies where deep margin status was unknown.
There was no funding for the study, and Dr. Duncan and Dr. Patel had no relevant disclosures.
FROM ACMS 2021
Mohs surgery favorable as monotherapy for early Merkel cell carcinomas
Pittsburgh.
The results compare favorably with the standard treatment approach, wide local excision with or without radiation, which has a local recurrence rate of 4.2%-31.7% because of incomplete excision or false negative margins, said Vitaly Terushkin, MD, a Mohs surgeon who presented the findings of the study, a retrospective chart review, at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
Mohs surgery as monotherapy offered “survival at least as good as historical controls treated with wide local excision plus radiation therapy, and because of the superior local control, Mohs surgery may obviate the need for adjuvant radiation and decrease the chance for additional surgery for the treatment of local recurrence,” said Dr. Terushkin, now in practice in the New York City area.
“We hope this data fuel additional studies with larger cohorts to continue to explore the value of Mohs for Merkel cell carcinoma,” he said.
The findings add to a growing body of literature supporting Mohs for many types of rare tumors. “Micrographic surgery or complete circumferential peripheral and deep margin analysis has been shown to be superior to wide local excision in a variety of tumors and clinical scenarios,” said Vishal Patel, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and director of the cutaneous oncology program at George Washington University, Washington.
“When the entire margin is able to be evaluated over random bread-loafed sections, there is growing evidence that this leads to superior outcomes and disease specific mortality,” he said when asked for comment on the study results.
In all, 56 primary Merkel cell carcinomas were treated in the 53 patients from 2001 to 2019; about two-thirds of the patients had stage 1 tumors and the rest stage 2a.
They were treated with Mohs alone, without radiation. Average follow up was 4.6 years, with about a third of patients followed for 5 or more years.
The average age of the patients was 78 years, and just over half were men. In more than half the cases, tumors were located on the head and neck (62.5%), and the mean tumor size was 1.7 cm. Patients were negative for lymphadenopathy and declined lymph node biopsy.
Although there was no local recurrence, defined as tumor reemerging within or adjacent to the surgery site, 7 patients (12.7%) developed in-transit metastases, 13 (23.6%) developed nodal metastases, and 3 developed distant metastases.
The 5-year disease-specific survival rate was 91.2% for stage 1 and 68.6% for stage 2a patients, which compared favorably with historical controls treated with wide local excision with or without radiation, with reported 5-year disease-specific survival rates of 81%-87% for stage 1 disease and 63%-67% for stage 2. Although radiation wasn’t used in the study, Dr. Patel noted that more investigation is needed about the role of adjuvant radiation therapy after Mohs surgery “given recent publications showing improved outcomes in patients with narrow margin excision and postoperative radiation therapy.”
No external funding of the study was reported. Dr. Terushkin had no disclosures. Dr. Patel is a consultant for Sanofi, Regeneron, and Almirall.
Pittsburgh.
The results compare favorably with the standard treatment approach, wide local excision with or without radiation, which has a local recurrence rate of 4.2%-31.7% because of incomplete excision or false negative margins, said Vitaly Terushkin, MD, a Mohs surgeon who presented the findings of the study, a retrospective chart review, at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
Mohs surgery as monotherapy offered “survival at least as good as historical controls treated with wide local excision plus radiation therapy, and because of the superior local control, Mohs surgery may obviate the need for adjuvant radiation and decrease the chance for additional surgery for the treatment of local recurrence,” said Dr. Terushkin, now in practice in the New York City area.
“We hope this data fuel additional studies with larger cohorts to continue to explore the value of Mohs for Merkel cell carcinoma,” he said.
The findings add to a growing body of literature supporting Mohs for many types of rare tumors. “Micrographic surgery or complete circumferential peripheral and deep margin analysis has been shown to be superior to wide local excision in a variety of tumors and clinical scenarios,” said Vishal Patel, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and director of the cutaneous oncology program at George Washington University, Washington.
“When the entire margin is able to be evaluated over random bread-loafed sections, there is growing evidence that this leads to superior outcomes and disease specific mortality,” he said when asked for comment on the study results.
In all, 56 primary Merkel cell carcinomas were treated in the 53 patients from 2001 to 2019; about two-thirds of the patients had stage 1 tumors and the rest stage 2a.
They were treated with Mohs alone, without radiation. Average follow up was 4.6 years, with about a third of patients followed for 5 or more years.
The average age of the patients was 78 years, and just over half were men. In more than half the cases, tumors were located on the head and neck (62.5%), and the mean tumor size was 1.7 cm. Patients were negative for lymphadenopathy and declined lymph node biopsy.
Although there was no local recurrence, defined as tumor reemerging within or adjacent to the surgery site, 7 patients (12.7%) developed in-transit metastases, 13 (23.6%) developed nodal metastases, and 3 developed distant metastases.
The 5-year disease-specific survival rate was 91.2% for stage 1 and 68.6% for stage 2a patients, which compared favorably with historical controls treated with wide local excision with or without radiation, with reported 5-year disease-specific survival rates of 81%-87% for stage 1 disease and 63%-67% for stage 2. Although radiation wasn’t used in the study, Dr. Patel noted that more investigation is needed about the role of adjuvant radiation therapy after Mohs surgery “given recent publications showing improved outcomes in patients with narrow margin excision and postoperative radiation therapy.”
No external funding of the study was reported. Dr. Terushkin had no disclosures. Dr. Patel is a consultant for Sanofi, Regeneron, and Almirall.
Pittsburgh.
The results compare favorably with the standard treatment approach, wide local excision with or without radiation, which has a local recurrence rate of 4.2%-31.7% because of incomplete excision or false negative margins, said Vitaly Terushkin, MD, a Mohs surgeon who presented the findings of the study, a retrospective chart review, at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
Mohs surgery as monotherapy offered “survival at least as good as historical controls treated with wide local excision plus radiation therapy, and because of the superior local control, Mohs surgery may obviate the need for adjuvant radiation and decrease the chance for additional surgery for the treatment of local recurrence,” said Dr. Terushkin, now in practice in the New York City area.
“We hope this data fuel additional studies with larger cohorts to continue to explore the value of Mohs for Merkel cell carcinoma,” he said.
The findings add to a growing body of literature supporting Mohs for many types of rare tumors. “Micrographic surgery or complete circumferential peripheral and deep margin analysis has been shown to be superior to wide local excision in a variety of tumors and clinical scenarios,” said Vishal Patel, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and director of the cutaneous oncology program at George Washington University, Washington.
“When the entire margin is able to be evaluated over random bread-loafed sections, there is growing evidence that this leads to superior outcomes and disease specific mortality,” he said when asked for comment on the study results.
In all, 56 primary Merkel cell carcinomas were treated in the 53 patients from 2001 to 2019; about two-thirds of the patients had stage 1 tumors and the rest stage 2a.
They were treated with Mohs alone, without radiation. Average follow up was 4.6 years, with about a third of patients followed for 5 or more years.
The average age of the patients was 78 years, and just over half were men. In more than half the cases, tumors were located on the head and neck (62.5%), and the mean tumor size was 1.7 cm. Patients were negative for lymphadenopathy and declined lymph node biopsy.
Although there was no local recurrence, defined as tumor reemerging within or adjacent to the surgery site, 7 patients (12.7%) developed in-transit metastases, 13 (23.6%) developed nodal metastases, and 3 developed distant metastases.
The 5-year disease-specific survival rate was 91.2% for stage 1 and 68.6% for stage 2a patients, which compared favorably with historical controls treated with wide local excision with or without radiation, with reported 5-year disease-specific survival rates of 81%-87% for stage 1 disease and 63%-67% for stage 2. Although radiation wasn’t used in the study, Dr. Patel noted that more investigation is needed about the role of adjuvant radiation therapy after Mohs surgery “given recent publications showing improved outcomes in patients with narrow margin excision and postoperative radiation therapy.”
No external funding of the study was reported. Dr. Terushkin had no disclosures. Dr. Patel is a consultant for Sanofi, Regeneron, and Almirall.
FROM ACMS 2021
Garbage out: How much trash does a Mohs surgery practice produce?
left behind after surgical procedures. Their findings: Just two physicians – a surgeon and a surgical fellow – manage to produce nearly a ton of noncontaminated surgical waste annually even though they only see patients twice a week.
“While our emissions as Mohs surgeons are relatively small compared to other types of surgeries, we still emit a notable amount of greenhouse gases compared to nonmedical fields. Mohs surgeons tend to produce the most noncontaminated waste versus other categories, and that’s the category that could be most recyclable,” said Mohs surgeon Simon S. Yoo, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, who presented the results at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
Dr. Yoo, who spoke in an interview, said the coronavirus pandemic spurred the waste analysis. “In the past year, there seemed to be many questions as to the environmental causes and impacts of the pandemic,” he said. “We decided to investigate the environmental impact of Mohs surgery.”
He and surgical fellow Alvin Li, MD, analyzed all waste produced by their clinic over a 3-week period when 106 procedures were performed. They discovered that the surgeries produced 25.8 kg of biohazardous waste (29%), 2.2 kg of packaging waste (3%), 56.4 kg of noncontaminated waste (63%), and 7.5 kg of sharps waste (8%).
“The majority of the waste we produced was noncontaminated and possibly recyclable,” Dr. Yoo said. “However, most of this waste and its packaging did not have clear recycling instructions and presented a significant barrier to recycling by our staff.”
The study authors extrapolated the waste amount to annual totals of 413.5 kg of biohazardous waste, 34.9 kg of packaging waste, 902.3 kg of noncontaminated waste, and 119.9 kg of sharps waste. That adds up to 1,471 kg. The total of noncontaminated waste is the equivalent of nearly 2,000 pounds – a ton.
Dr. Yoo and Dr. Li estimate that the waste produced annual emissions equal to 6.5 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. They estimate that the amount of emissions produced by Mohs surgeons nationally each year is 7,592 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, equal to emissions produced by 19 million miles of passenger automobile travel.
Still, Dr. Yoo said, Mohs surgeries appear to produce fewer emissions than some other operations. “We estimate that an individual Mohs procedure generates around 10 kg of carbon dioxide equivalent whereas a single hysterectomy generates about 380 kg; much of this is due to the use of volatile anesthetics.”
Environmental protection advocate Mary Maloney, MD, professor of medicine and director of dermatologic surgery at the University of Massachusetts, Worcester, urged colleagues to launch a similar waste-weighing project in their own clinics. “I challenge dermatologists to take a bag of your daily plastic waste and weigh it,” she said. “We’ll all be astounded by how much we throw away each day. Until you do that experiment yourself, you’ll have a hard time getting your arms around how much plastic we’re using.”
Dr. Maloney, a member of the American Academy of Dermatology Expert Resource Group for Climate Change and Environmental Issues, urged colleagues to consider strategies to reduce plastic use specifically. “Look at everything you use and see if there’s a nonplastic equivalent,” she said. Even reducing the use of plastic writing pens can make a difference, she said, as can cutting back on syringes and revising procedures so gloves don’t have to be changed as often.
No study funding was reported. Dr. Yoo and Dr. Maloney report no disclosures.
left behind after surgical procedures. Their findings: Just two physicians – a surgeon and a surgical fellow – manage to produce nearly a ton of noncontaminated surgical waste annually even though they only see patients twice a week.
“While our emissions as Mohs surgeons are relatively small compared to other types of surgeries, we still emit a notable amount of greenhouse gases compared to nonmedical fields. Mohs surgeons tend to produce the most noncontaminated waste versus other categories, and that’s the category that could be most recyclable,” said Mohs surgeon Simon S. Yoo, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, who presented the results at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
Dr. Yoo, who spoke in an interview, said the coronavirus pandemic spurred the waste analysis. “In the past year, there seemed to be many questions as to the environmental causes and impacts of the pandemic,” he said. “We decided to investigate the environmental impact of Mohs surgery.”
He and surgical fellow Alvin Li, MD, analyzed all waste produced by their clinic over a 3-week period when 106 procedures were performed. They discovered that the surgeries produced 25.8 kg of biohazardous waste (29%), 2.2 kg of packaging waste (3%), 56.4 kg of noncontaminated waste (63%), and 7.5 kg of sharps waste (8%).
“The majority of the waste we produced was noncontaminated and possibly recyclable,” Dr. Yoo said. “However, most of this waste and its packaging did not have clear recycling instructions and presented a significant barrier to recycling by our staff.”
The study authors extrapolated the waste amount to annual totals of 413.5 kg of biohazardous waste, 34.9 kg of packaging waste, 902.3 kg of noncontaminated waste, and 119.9 kg of sharps waste. That adds up to 1,471 kg. The total of noncontaminated waste is the equivalent of nearly 2,000 pounds – a ton.
Dr. Yoo and Dr. Li estimate that the waste produced annual emissions equal to 6.5 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. They estimate that the amount of emissions produced by Mohs surgeons nationally each year is 7,592 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, equal to emissions produced by 19 million miles of passenger automobile travel.
Still, Dr. Yoo said, Mohs surgeries appear to produce fewer emissions than some other operations. “We estimate that an individual Mohs procedure generates around 10 kg of carbon dioxide equivalent whereas a single hysterectomy generates about 380 kg; much of this is due to the use of volatile anesthetics.”
Environmental protection advocate Mary Maloney, MD, professor of medicine and director of dermatologic surgery at the University of Massachusetts, Worcester, urged colleagues to launch a similar waste-weighing project in their own clinics. “I challenge dermatologists to take a bag of your daily plastic waste and weigh it,” she said. “We’ll all be astounded by how much we throw away each day. Until you do that experiment yourself, you’ll have a hard time getting your arms around how much plastic we’re using.”
Dr. Maloney, a member of the American Academy of Dermatology Expert Resource Group for Climate Change and Environmental Issues, urged colleagues to consider strategies to reduce plastic use specifically. “Look at everything you use and see if there’s a nonplastic equivalent,” she said. Even reducing the use of plastic writing pens can make a difference, she said, as can cutting back on syringes and revising procedures so gloves don’t have to be changed as often.
No study funding was reported. Dr. Yoo and Dr. Maloney report no disclosures.
left behind after surgical procedures. Their findings: Just two physicians – a surgeon and a surgical fellow – manage to produce nearly a ton of noncontaminated surgical waste annually even though they only see patients twice a week.
“While our emissions as Mohs surgeons are relatively small compared to other types of surgeries, we still emit a notable amount of greenhouse gases compared to nonmedical fields. Mohs surgeons tend to produce the most noncontaminated waste versus other categories, and that’s the category that could be most recyclable,” said Mohs surgeon Simon S. Yoo, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, who presented the results at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
Dr. Yoo, who spoke in an interview, said the coronavirus pandemic spurred the waste analysis. “In the past year, there seemed to be many questions as to the environmental causes and impacts of the pandemic,” he said. “We decided to investigate the environmental impact of Mohs surgery.”
He and surgical fellow Alvin Li, MD, analyzed all waste produced by their clinic over a 3-week period when 106 procedures were performed. They discovered that the surgeries produced 25.8 kg of biohazardous waste (29%), 2.2 kg of packaging waste (3%), 56.4 kg of noncontaminated waste (63%), and 7.5 kg of sharps waste (8%).
“The majority of the waste we produced was noncontaminated and possibly recyclable,” Dr. Yoo said. “However, most of this waste and its packaging did not have clear recycling instructions and presented a significant barrier to recycling by our staff.”
The study authors extrapolated the waste amount to annual totals of 413.5 kg of biohazardous waste, 34.9 kg of packaging waste, 902.3 kg of noncontaminated waste, and 119.9 kg of sharps waste. That adds up to 1,471 kg. The total of noncontaminated waste is the equivalent of nearly 2,000 pounds – a ton.
Dr. Yoo and Dr. Li estimate that the waste produced annual emissions equal to 6.5 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. They estimate that the amount of emissions produced by Mohs surgeons nationally each year is 7,592 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, equal to emissions produced by 19 million miles of passenger automobile travel.
Still, Dr. Yoo said, Mohs surgeries appear to produce fewer emissions than some other operations. “We estimate that an individual Mohs procedure generates around 10 kg of carbon dioxide equivalent whereas a single hysterectomy generates about 380 kg; much of this is due to the use of volatile anesthetics.”
Environmental protection advocate Mary Maloney, MD, professor of medicine and director of dermatologic surgery at the University of Massachusetts, Worcester, urged colleagues to launch a similar waste-weighing project in their own clinics. “I challenge dermatologists to take a bag of your daily plastic waste and weigh it,” she said. “We’ll all be astounded by how much we throw away each day. Until you do that experiment yourself, you’ll have a hard time getting your arms around how much plastic we’re using.”
Dr. Maloney, a member of the American Academy of Dermatology Expert Resource Group for Climate Change and Environmental Issues, urged colleagues to consider strategies to reduce plastic use specifically. “Look at everything you use and see if there’s a nonplastic equivalent,” she said. Even reducing the use of plastic writing pens can make a difference, she said, as can cutting back on syringes and revising procedures so gloves don’t have to be changed as often.
No study funding was reported. Dr. Yoo and Dr. Maloney report no disclosures.
FROM THE ACMS ANNUAL MEETING
Survey: Many Mohs surgeons are struggling on the job
.
In a measurement of well-being, 40% of members of the American College of Mohs
Surgery (ACMS) who responded to the survey – and 52% of women – scored at a level considered “at-risk” for adverse outcomes, such as poor quality of life.
“I didn’t think the numbers were going to be that high,” said study author Kemi O. Awe, MD, PhD, a dermatology resident at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, especially in light of Mohs surgery’s reputation as being an especially desirable field in dermatology. She presented the findings at the annual meeting of the ACMS.
Dr. Awe, who hopes to become a Mohs surgeon herself, said in an interview that she launched the study in part to understand how colleagues are faring. “Dermatology is known as a specialty that has a good lifestyle and less stress, but the rate of burnout is actually going up.”
For the study, Dr. Awe and colleagues sent a survey to ACMS members between October and December 2020. The 91 respondents had an average age of 46, and 58% were male. Most practiced in academic facilities (56%), while the rest worked in private practice (39%) or multispecialty (4%) practices. Almost all (89%) were married or in partnerships.
The survey calculated scores on the expanded Physician Well Being Index, a validated tool for measuring physician distress. Forty percent of 68 respondents to this part of the survey got a score of 3 or higher, which the study describes as “a threshold for respondents who are ‘at-risk’ of adverse outcomes such as poor quality of life, depression, and a high level of fatigue.”
Women were more likely to be considered at risk (52%) than men (28%). “This isn’t different than what’s already out there: Female physicians are more likely to be burned out compared to men,” Dr. Awe said.
Compared with their male counterparts, female Mohs surgeons were more likely to say that time at work, malpractice concerns, insurance reimbursement, and compensation structure negatively affected their well-being (P ≤ .05).
It’s unclear whether there’s a well-being gender gap among dermatologists overall, however. Dr. Awe highlighted a 2019 survey of 108 dermatologists that found no significant difference in overall burnout between men and women – about 42% of both genders reported symptoms. But the survey did find that “dermatologists with children living at home had significantly higher levels of burnout,” with a P value of .03.
Dr. Awe said the findings offer insight into what to look out for when pursuing a career as a Mohs surgeon. “There’s potentially excess stress about being a Mohs surgeon,” she said, although the field also has a reputation as being fulfilling and rewarding.
In an interview, Stanford (Calif.) University dermatologist Zakia Rahman, MD, praised the study and said it “certainly provides a framework to address professional fulfillment amongst Mohs surgeons.”
It was especially surprising, she said, that female surgeons didn’t rate their compensation structure as positively as did their male colleagues. “It is possible that there is still a significant amount of gender-based difference in compensation between male and female Mohs surgeons. This is an area that can be further explored.”
Moving forward, she said, “our professional dermatology societies must examine the increase in burnout within our specialty. Further funding and research in this area is needed.”
For now, dermatologists can focus on strategies that can reduce burnout in the field, Sailesh Konda, MD, a Mohs surgeon at the Univeristy of Florida, Gainesville, said in an interview. Dr. Konda highlighted a report published in 2020 that, he said, "recommended focusing on incremental changes that help restore autonomy and control over work, connecting with colleagues within dermatology and the broader medical community, developing self-awareness and recognition of a perfectionist mindset, and restoring meaning and joy to patient care.”*
No funding is reported for the study. Dr. Awe, Dr. Rahman, and Dr. Konda have no relevant disclosures.
*This story was updated on June 2 for clarity.
.
In a measurement of well-being, 40% of members of the American College of Mohs
Surgery (ACMS) who responded to the survey – and 52% of women – scored at a level considered “at-risk” for adverse outcomes, such as poor quality of life.
“I didn’t think the numbers were going to be that high,” said study author Kemi O. Awe, MD, PhD, a dermatology resident at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, especially in light of Mohs surgery’s reputation as being an especially desirable field in dermatology. She presented the findings at the annual meeting of the ACMS.
Dr. Awe, who hopes to become a Mohs surgeon herself, said in an interview that she launched the study in part to understand how colleagues are faring. “Dermatology is known as a specialty that has a good lifestyle and less stress, but the rate of burnout is actually going up.”
For the study, Dr. Awe and colleagues sent a survey to ACMS members between October and December 2020. The 91 respondents had an average age of 46, and 58% were male. Most practiced in academic facilities (56%), while the rest worked in private practice (39%) or multispecialty (4%) practices. Almost all (89%) were married or in partnerships.
The survey calculated scores on the expanded Physician Well Being Index, a validated tool for measuring physician distress. Forty percent of 68 respondents to this part of the survey got a score of 3 or higher, which the study describes as “a threshold for respondents who are ‘at-risk’ of adverse outcomes such as poor quality of life, depression, and a high level of fatigue.”
Women were more likely to be considered at risk (52%) than men (28%). “This isn’t different than what’s already out there: Female physicians are more likely to be burned out compared to men,” Dr. Awe said.
Compared with their male counterparts, female Mohs surgeons were more likely to say that time at work, malpractice concerns, insurance reimbursement, and compensation structure negatively affected their well-being (P ≤ .05).
It’s unclear whether there’s a well-being gender gap among dermatologists overall, however. Dr. Awe highlighted a 2019 survey of 108 dermatologists that found no significant difference in overall burnout between men and women – about 42% of both genders reported symptoms. But the survey did find that “dermatologists with children living at home had significantly higher levels of burnout,” with a P value of .03.
Dr. Awe said the findings offer insight into what to look out for when pursuing a career as a Mohs surgeon. “There’s potentially excess stress about being a Mohs surgeon,” she said, although the field also has a reputation as being fulfilling and rewarding.
In an interview, Stanford (Calif.) University dermatologist Zakia Rahman, MD, praised the study and said it “certainly provides a framework to address professional fulfillment amongst Mohs surgeons.”
It was especially surprising, she said, that female surgeons didn’t rate their compensation structure as positively as did their male colleagues. “It is possible that there is still a significant amount of gender-based difference in compensation between male and female Mohs surgeons. This is an area that can be further explored.”
Moving forward, she said, “our professional dermatology societies must examine the increase in burnout within our specialty. Further funding and research in this area is needed.”
For now, dermatologists can focus on strategies that can reduce burnout in the field, Sailesh Konda, MD, a Mohs surgeon at the Univeristy of Florida, Gainesville, said in an interview. Dr. Konda highlighted a report published in 2020 that, he said, "recommended focusing on incremental changes that help restore autonomy and control over work, connecting with colleagues within dermatology and the broader medical community, developing self-awareness and recognition of a perfectionist mindset, and restoring meaning and joy to patient care.”*
No funding is reported for the study. Dr. Awe, Dr. Rahman, and Dr. Konda have no relevant disclosures.
*This story was updated on June 2 for clarity.
.
In a measurement of well-being, 40% of members of the American College of Mohs
Surgery (ACMS) who responded to the survey – and 52% of women – scored at a level considered “at-risk” for adverse outcomes, such as poor quality of life.
“I didn’t think the numbers were going to be that high,” said study author Kemi O. Awe, MD, PhD, a dermatology resident at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, especially in light of Mohs surgery’s reputation as being an especially desirable field in dermatology. She presented the findings at the annual meeting of the ACMS.
Dr. Awe, who hopes to become a Mohs surgeon herself, said in an interview that she launched the study in part to understand how colleagues are faring. “Dermatology is known as a specialty that has a good lifestyle and less stress, but the rate of burnout is actually going up.”
For the study, Dr. Awe and colleagues sent a survey to ACMS members between October and December 2020. The 91 respondents had an average age of 46, and 58% were male. Most practiced in academic facilities (56%), while the rest worked in private practice (39%) or multispecialty (4%) practices. Almost all (89%) were married or in partnerships.
The survey calculated scores on the expanded Physician Well Being Index, a validated tool for measuring physician distress. Forty percent of 68 respondents to this part of the survey got a score of 3 or higher, which the study describes as “a threshold for respondents who are ‘at-risk’ of adverse outcomes such as poor quality of life, depression, and a high level of fatigue.”
Women were more likely to be considered at risk (52%) than men (28%). “This isn’t different than what’s already out there: Female physicians are more likely to be burned out compared to men,” Dr. Awe said.
Compared with their male counterparts, female Mohs surgeons were more likely to say that time at work, malpractice concerns, insurance reimbursement, and compensation structure negatively affected their well-being (P ≤ .05).
It’s unclear whether there’s a well-being gender gap among dermatologists overall, however. Dr. Awe highlighted a 2019 survey of 108 dermatologists that found no significant difference in overall burnout between men and women – about 42% of both genders reported symptoms. But the survey did find that “dermatologists with children living at home had significantly higher levels of burnout,” with a P value of .03.
Dr. Awe said the findings offer insight into what to look out for when pursuing a career as a Mohs surgeon. “There’s potentially excess stress about being a Mohs surgeon,” she said, although the field also has a reputation as being fulfilling and rewarding.
In an interview, Stanford (Calif.) University dermatologist Zakia Rahman, MD, praised the study and said it “certainly provides a framework to address professional fulfillment amongst Mohs surgeons.”
It was especially surprising, she said, that female surgeons didn’t rate their compensation structure as positively as did their male colleagues. “It is possible that there is still a significant amount of gender-based difference in compensation between male and female Mohs surgeons. This is an area that can be further explored.”
Moving forward, she said, “our professional dermatology societies must examine the increase in burnout within our specialty. Further funding and research in this area is needed.”
For now, dermatologists can focus on strategies that can reduce burnout in the field, Sailesh Konda, MD, a Mohs surgeon at the Univeristy of Florida, Gainesville, said in an interview. Dr. Konda highlighted a report published in 2020 that, he said, "recommended focusing on incremental changes that help restore autonomy and control over work, connecting with colleagues within dermatology and the broader medical community, developing self-awareness and recognition of a perfectionist mindset, and restoring meaning and joy to patient care.”*
No funding is reported for the study. Dr. Awe, Dr. Rahman, and Dr. Konda have no relevant disclosures.
*This story was updated on June 2 for clarity.
FROM THE ACMS ANNUAL MEETING
Telemedicine is popular among Mohs surgeons – for now
A majority of
A variety of factors combine to make it “very difficult for surgeons to make long-term plans for implementing telemedicine in their practices,” said Mario Maruthur, MD, who presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery. “Telemedicine likely has a role in Mohs practices, particularly with postop follow-up visits. However, postpandemic reimbursement and regulatory issues need to be formally laid out before Mohs surgeons are able to incorporate it into their permanent work flow.”
Dr. Maruthur, a Mohs surgery and dermatologic oncology fellow at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, and colleagues sent a survey to ACMS members in September and October 2020. “We saw first-hand in our surgical practice that telemedicine quickly became an important tool when the pandemic surged in the spring of 2020,” he said. Considering that surgical practices are highly dependent on in-person visits, the impetus for this study was to assess to what degree Mohs practices from across the spectrum, including academic and private practices, embraced telemedicine during the pandemic, and “what these surgical practices used telemedicine for, how it was received by their patients, which telemedicine platforms were most often utilized, and lastly, what are their plans if any for incorporating telemedicine into their surgical practices after the pandemic subsides.”
The researchers received responses from 115 surgeons representing all regions of the country (40% Northeast, 21% South, 21% Midwest, and 18% West). Half practiced in urban areas (37%) and large cities (13%), and 40% were in an academic setting versus 36% in a single-specialty private practice.
More than 70% of the respondents said their case load fell by at least 75% during the initial surge of the pandemic; 80% turned to telemedicine, compared with just 23% who relied on the technology prior to the pandemic. The most commonly used telemedicine technologies were FaceTime, Zoom, Doximity, and Epic.
Mohs surgeons reported most commonly using telemedicine for postsurgery management (77% of the total 115 responses). “Telemedicine is a great fit for this category of visits as they allow the surgeon to view the surgical site and answer any questions they patient may have,” Dr. Maruthur said. “If the surgeon does suspect a postop infection or other concern based on a patient’s signs or symptoms, they can easily schedule the patient for an in-person assessment. We suspect that postop follow-up visits may be the best candidate for long-term use of telemedicine in Mohs surgery practices.”
Surgeons also reported using telemedicine for “spot checks” (61%) and surgical consultations (59%).
However, Dr. Maruther noted that preoperative assessments and spot checks can be difficult to perform using telemedicine. “The quality of the video image is not always great, patients can have a difficult time pointing the camera at the right spot and at the right distance. Even appreciating the actual size of the lesion are all difficult over a video encounter. And there is a lot of information gleaned from in-person physical examination, such as whether the lesion is fixed to a deeper structure and whether there are any nearby scars or other suspicious lesions.”
Nearly three-quarters of the surgeons using the technology said most or all patients were receptive to telemedicine.
However, the surgeons reported multiple barriers to the use of telemedicine: Limitations when compared with physical exams (88%), fitting it into the work flow (58%), patient response and training (57%), reimbursement concerns (50%), implementation of the technology (37%), regulations such as HIPAA (24%), training of staff (17%), and licensing (8%).
In an interview, Sumaira Z. Aasi, MD, director of Mohs and dermatologic surgery, Stanford University, agreed that there are many obstacles to routine use of telemedicine by Mohs surgeons. “As surgeons, we rely on the physical and tactile exam to get a sense of the size and extent of the cancer and characteristics such as the laxity of the surrounding tissue whether the tumor is fixed,” she said. “It is very difficult to access this on a telemedicine visit.”
In addition, she said, “many of our patients are in the elderly population, and some may not be comfortable using this technology. Also, it’s not a work flow that we are comfortable or familiar with. And I think that the technology has to improve to allow for better resolution of images as we ‘examine’ patients through a telemedicine visit.”
She added that “another con is there is a reliance on having the patient point out lesions of concern. Many cancers are picked by a careful in-person examination by a qualified physician/dermatologist/Mohs surgeon when the lesion is quite small or subtle and not even noticed by the patient themselves. This approach invariably leads to earlier biopsies and earlier treatments that can prevent morbidity and save health care money.”
On the other hand, she said, telemedicine “may save patients some time and money in terms of the effort and cost of transportation to come in for simpler postoperative medical visits that are often short in their very nature, such as postop check-ups.”
Most of the surgeons surveyed (69%) said telemedicine probably or definitely deserves a place in the practice Mohs surgery, but only 50% said they’d like to or would definitely pursue giving telemedicine a role in their practices once the pandemic is over.
“At the start of the pandemic, many regulations in areas such as HIPAA were eased, and reimbursements were increased, which allowed telemedicine to be quickly adopted,” Dr. Maruther said. “The government and payers have yet to decide which regulations and reimbursements will be in place after the pandemic. That makes it very difficult for surgeons to make long-term plans for implementing telemedicine in their practices.”
Dr. Aasi predicted that telemedicine will become more appealing to patients and physicians as it its technology and usability improves. More familiarity with its use will also be helpful, she said, and surgeons will be more receptive as it’s incorporated into efficient daily work flow.
The study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health.
A majority of
A variety of factors combine to make it “very difficult for surgeons to make long-term plans for implementing telemedicine in their practices,” said Mario Maruthur, MD, who presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery. “Telemedicine likely has a role in Mohs practices, particularly with postop follow-up visits. However, postpandemic reimbursement and regulatory issues need to be formally laid out before Mohs surgeons are able to incorporate it into their permanent work flow.”
Dr. Maruthur, a Mohs surgery and dermatologic oncology fellow at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, and colleagues sent a survey to ACMS members in September and October 2020. “We saw first-hand in our surgical practice that telemedicine quickly became an important tool when the pandemic surged in the spring of 2020,” he said. Considering that surgical practices are highly dependent on in-person visits, the impetus for this study was to assess to what degree Mohs practices from across the spectrum, including academic and private practices, embraced telemedicine during the pandemic, and “what these surgical practices used telemedicine for, how it was received by their patients, which telemedicine platforms were most often utilized, and lastly, what are their plans if any for incorporating telemedicine into their surgical practices after the pandemic subsides.”
The researchers received responses from 115 surgeons representing all regions of the country (40% Northeast, 21% South, 21% Midwest, and 18% West). Half practiced in urban areas (37%) and large cities (13%), and 40% were in an academic setting versus 36% in a single-specialty private practice.
More than 70% of the respondents said their case load fell by at least 75% during the initial surge of the pandemic; 80% turned to telemedicine, compared with just 23% who relied on the technology prior to the pandemic. The most commonly used telemedicine technologies were FaceTime, Zoom, Doximity, and Epic.
Mohs surgeons reported most commonly using telemedicine for postsurgery management (77% of the total 115 responses). “Telemedicine is a great fit for this category of visits as they allow the surgeon to view the surgical site and answer any questions they patient may have,” Dr. Maruthur said. “If the surgeon does suspect a postop infection or other concern based on a patient’s signs or symptoms, they can easily schedule the patient for an in-person assessment. We suspect that postop follow-up visits may be the best candidate for long-term use of telemedicine in Mohs surgery practices.”
Surgeons also reported using telemedicine for “spot checks” (61%) and surgical consultations (59%).
However, Dr. Maruther noted that preoperative assessments and spot checks can be difficult to perform using telemedicine. “The quality of the video image is not always great, patients can have a difficult time pointing the camera at the right spot and at the right distance. Even appreciating the actual size of the lesion are all difficult over a video encounter. And there is a lot of information gleaned from in-person physical examination, such as whether the lesion is fixed to a deeper structure and whether there are any nearby scars or other suspicious lesions.”
Nearly three-quarters of the surgeons using the technology said most or all patients were receptive to telemedicine.
However, the surgeons reported multiple barriers to the use of telemedicine: Limitations when compared with physical exams (88%), fitting it into the work flow (58%), patient response and training (57%), reimbursement concerns (50%), implementation of the technology (37%), regulations such as HIPAA (24%), training of staff (17%), and licensing (8%).
In an interview, Sumaira Z. Aasi, MD, director of Mohs and dermatologic surgery, Stanford University, agreed that there are many obstacles to routine use of telemedicine by Mohs surgeons. “As surgeons, we rely on the physical and tactile exam to get a sense of the size and extent of the cancer and characteristics such as the laxity of the surrounding tissue whether the tumor is fixed,” she said. “It is very difficult to access this on a telemedicine visit.”
In addition, she said, “many of our patients are in the elderly population, and some may not be comfortable using this technology. Also, it’s not a work flow that we are comfortable or familiar with. And I think that the technology has to improve to allow for better resolution of images as we ‘examine’ patients through a telemedicine visit.”
She added that “another con is there is a reliance on having the patient point out lesions of concern. Many cancers are picked by a careful in-person examination by a qualified physician/dermatologist/Mohs surgeon when the lesion is quite small or subtle and not even noticed by the patient themselves. This approach invariably leads to earlier biopsies and earlier treatments that can prevent morbidity and save health care money.”
On the other hand, she said, telemedicine “may save patients some time and money in terms of the effort and cost of transportation to come in for simpler postoperative medical visits that are often short in their very nature, such as postop check-ups.”
Most of the surgeons surveyed (69%) said telemedicine probably or definitely deserves a place in the practice Mohs surgery, but only 50% said they’d like to or would definitely pursue giving telemedicine a role in their practices once the pandemic is over.
“At the start of the pandemic, many regulations in areas such as HIPAA were eased, and reimbursements were increased, which allowed telemedicine to be quickly adopted,” Dr. Maruther said. “The government and payers have yet to decide which regulations and reimbursements will be in place after the pandemic. That makes it very difficult for surgeons to make long-term plans for implementing telemedicine in their practices.”
Dr. Aasi predicted that telemedicine will become more appealing to patients and physicians as it its technology and usability improves. More familiarity with its use will also be helpful, she said, and surgeons will be more receptive as it’s incorporated into efficient daily work flow.
The study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health.
A majority of
A variety of factors combine to make it “very difficult for surgeons to make long-term plans for implementing telemedicine in their practices,” said Mario Maruthur, MD, who presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery. “Telemedicine likely has a role in Mohs practices, particularly with postop follow-up visits. However, postpandemic reimbursement and regulatory issues need to be formally laid out before Mohs surgeons are able to incorporate it into their permanent work flow.”
Dr. Maruthur, a Mohs surgery and dermatologic oncology fellow at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, and colleagues sent a survey to ACMS members in September and October 2020. “We saw first-hand in our surgical practice that telemedicine quickly became an important tool when the pandemic surged in the spring of 2020,” he said. Considering that surgical practices are highly dependent on in-person visits, the impetus for this study was to assess to what degree Mohs practices from across the spectrum, including academic and private practices, embraced telemedicine during the pandemic, and “what these surgical practices used telemedicine for, how it was received by their patients, which telemedicine platforms were most often utilized, and lastly, what are their plans if any for incorporating telemedicine into their surgical practices after the pandemic subsides.”
The researchers received responses from 115 surgeons representing all regions of the country (40% Northeast, 21% South, 21% Midwest, and 18% West). Half practiced in urban areas (37%) and large cities (13%), and 40% were in an academic setting versus 36% in a single-specialty private practice.
More than 70% of the respondents said their case load fell by at least 75% during the initial surge of the pandemic; 80% turned to telemedicine, compared with just 23% who relied on the technology prior to the pandemic. The most commonly used telemedicine technologies were FaceTime, Zoom, Doximity, and Epic.
Mohs surgeons reported most commonly using telemedicine for postsurgery management (77% of the total 115 responses). “Telemedicine is a great fit for this category of visits as they allow the surgeon to view the surgical site and answer any questions they patient may have,” Dr. Maruthur said. “If the surgeon does suspect a postop infection or other concern based on a patient’s signs or symptoms, they can easily schedule the patient for an in-person assessment. We suspect that postop follow-up visits may be the best candidate for long-term use of telemedicine in Mohs surgery practices.”
Surgeons also reported using telemedicine for “spot checks” (61%) and surgical consultations (59%).
However, Dr. Maruther noted that preoperative assessments and spot checks can be difficult to perform using telemedicine. “The quality of the video image is not always great, patients can have a difficult time pointing the camera at the right spot and at the right distance. Even appreciating the actual size of the lesion are all difficult over a video encounter. And there is a lot of information gleaned from in-person physical examination, such as whether the lesion is fixed to a deeper structure and whether there are any nearby scars or other suspicious lesions.”
Nearly three-quarters of the surgeons using the technology said most or all patients were receptive to telemedicine.
However, the surgeons reported multiple barriers to the use of telemedicine: Limitations when compared with physical exams (88%), fitting it into the work flow (58%), patient response and training (57%), reimbursement concerns (50%), implementation of the technology (37%), regulations such as HIPAA (24%), training of staff (17%), and licensing (8%).
In an interview, Sumaira Z. Aasi, MD, director of Mohs and dermatologic surgery, Stanford University, agreed that there are many obstacles to routine use of telemedicine by Mohs surgeons. “As surgeons, we rely on the physical and tactile exam to get a sense of the size and extent of the cancer and characteristics such as the laxity of the surrounding tissue whether the tumor is fixed,” she said. “It is very difficult to access this on a telemedicine visit.”
In addition, she said, “many of our patients are in the elderly population, and some may not be comfortable using this technology. Also, it’s not a work flow that we are comfortable or familiar with. And I think that the technology has to improve to allow for better resolution of images as we ‘examine’ patients through a telemedicine visit.”
She added that “another con is there is a reliance on having the patient point out lesions of concern. Many cancers are picked by a careful in-person examination by a qualified physician/dermatologist/Mohs surgeon when the lesion is quite small or subtle and not even noticed by the patient themselves. This approach invariably leads to earlier biopsies and earlier treatments that can prevent morbidity and save health care money.”
On the other hand, she said, telemedicine “may save patients some time and money in terms of the effort and cost of transportation to come in for simpler postoperative medical visits that are often short in their very nature, such as postop check-ups.”
Most of the surgeons surveyed (69%) said telemedicine probably or definitely deserves a place in the practice Mohs surgery, but only 50% said they’d like to or would definitely pursue giving telemedicine a role in their practices once the pandemic is over.
“At the start of the pandemic, many regulations in areas such as HIPAA were eased, and reimbursements were increased, which allowed telemedicine to be quickly adopted,” Dr. Maruther said. “The government and payers have yet to decide which regulations and reimbursements will be in place after the pandemic. That makes it very difficult for surgeons to make long-term plans for implementing telemedicine in their practices.”
Dr. Aasi predicted that telemedicine will become more appealing to patients and physicians as it its technology and usability improves. More familiarity with its use will also be helpful, she said, and surgeons will be more receptive as it’s incorporated into efficient daily work flow.
The study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health.
FROM THE ACMS ANNUAL MEETING
Novel hedgehog inhibitor strategies improve BCC outcomes
MD, a Mohs surgeon and chair of the department of dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic.
She and her colleagues have noticed an accelerated and durable response to hedgehog inhibitors after debulking and are studying cell signaling before and after debulking to better understand the issue.
Dr. Vidimos shared a remarkable case to illustrate the point during a clinical pearls talk at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
An 82-year-old woman presented with a crusted, hemorrhagic, nodular basal cell carcinoma (BCC) that had overgrown over nearly her entire nose and left lower eyelid. A recurrence of a previous BCC, the tumor had been growing for a decade and had invaded her nasal bones but not the periorbital tissue.
An outside surgeon suggested a full rhinectomy and removal of the lower eyelid, but the woman refused.
Dr. Vidimos decided to treat her with vismodegib, but prior to doing so, she debulked the tumor to help with the pain and bleeding. She did not curette the portion of tumor extending through the ala into the nasal vestibule. “I let the vismodegib take care of that,” she said.
After 9 months, the tumor was virtually gone, with no recurrence after 3 years. Surgical debulking prior to hedgehog inhibition “reduces the tumor burden and may increase the efficacy and shorten the course of therapy,” Dr. Vidimos said.
The hedgehog inhibitors vismodegib (Erivedge) and sonidegib Odomzo are both approved for treating locally advanced BCC, with a complete response of 31% of locally advanced disease with vismodegib, according to one report.
But monotherapy is limited by intolerable side effects, most commonly muscle spasms, alopecia, and dysgeusia. To minimize the impact, Dr. Vidimos generally puts patients on treatment with Monday through Friday dosing and gives them the weekends off, a schedule she and her colleagues have reported works as well as daily dosing.
Still, many patients discontinue the drugs because of the side effects. Hedgehog inhibitors are also expensive and responses aren’t always durable. To increase efficacy and shorten the course of therapy, “we need alternative treatment strategies,” Dr. Vidimos said.
Up-front tumor debulking is one such strategy. Altered cell signaling pathways associated with tissue remodeling might improve response, and debulking may reduce the genetic heterogeneity of tumor cells, rendering remaining cells less resistant to hedgehog inhibition, she explained.
“It is exciting to see how tumor debulking may reduce tumor burden and heterogeneity, and thus lead to a durable response in extensive tumors,” said Vishal Patel, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and director of the cutaneous oncology program at George Washington University, Washington, who heard the presentation. “More investigation is needed to reproduce these results, but this approach may lead to improved outcomes with targeted therapies,” he said in an interview.
Combination therapy with other agents is another option, and there also seems to be a synergistic effect with radiation, with hedgehog inhibitors increasing cellular response to radiation therapy, Dr. Vidimos said.
Hedgehog inhibitors can also be used to shrink tumors before surgery. One small series found a 27% decrease in the area of the tumor after 3 to 6 months of preoperative vismodegib.
Dr. Vidimos shared another case to illustrate the point.
A 64-year-old woman fainted and presented to the ED with a hemoglobin of 3.2 mg/dL because of chronic blood loss from an ulcerated BCC on her upper back. The lesion measured 25 cm by 9 cm, and was 3.5 cm deep with no bone involvement. The woman was addicted to opioids by the time she presented.
She was started on vismodegib; the ulcer shrunk considerably after 6 months, and the woman underwent a resection. Only one small focus of BCC was found across 78 specimens submitted to Dr. Vidimos for Mohs reading.
Resection was followed by a muscle flap repair and radiation. At 5 and a half years, there is no evidence of disease; the only sign that the lesion had been there was a scar running along the woman’s upper spine.
The approach “was very successful for a very aggressive and worrisome tumor,” Dr. Vidimos said.
Dr. Vidimos did not have any relevant disclosures. Dr. Patel had no relevant disclosures.
MD, a Mohs surgeon and chair of the department of dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic.
She and her colleagues have noticed an accelerated and durable response to hedgehog inhibitors after debulking and are studying cell signaling before and after debulking to better understand the issue.
Dr. Vidimos shared a remarkable case to illustrate the point during a clinical pearls talk at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
An 82-year-old woman presented with a crusted, hemorrhagic, nodular basal cell carcinoma (BCC) that had overgrown over nearly her entire nose and left lower eyelid. A recurrence of a previous BCC, the tumor had been growing for a decade and had invaded her nasal bones but not the periorbital tissue.
An outside surgeon suggested a full rhinectomy and removal of the lower eyelid, but the woman refused.
Dr. Vidimos decided to treat her with vismodegib, but prior to doing so, she debulked the tumor to help with the pain and bleeding. She did not curette the portion of tumor extending through the ala into the nasal vestibule. “I let the vismodegib take care of that,” she said.
After 9 months, the tumor was virtually gone, with no recurrence after 3 years. Surgical debulking prior to hedgehog inhibition “reduces the tumor burden and may increase the efficacy and shorten the course of therapy,” Dr. Vidimos said.
The hedgehog inhibitors vismodegib (Erivedge) and sonidegib Odomzo are both approved for treating locally advanced BCC, with a complete response of 31% of locally advanced disease with vismodegib, according to one report.
But monotherapy is limited by intolerable side effects, most commonly muscle spasms, alopecia, and dysgeusia. To minimize the impact, Dr. Vidimos generally puts patients on treatment with Monday through Friday dosing and gives them the weekends off, a schedule she and her colleagues have reported works as well as daily dosing.
Still, many patients discontinue the drugs because of the side effects. Hedgehog inhibitors are also expensive and responses aren’t always durable. To increase efficacy and shorten the course of therapy, “we need alternative treatment strategies,” Dr. Vidimos said.
Up-front tumor debulking is one such strategy. Altered cell signaling pathways associated with tissue remodeling might improve response, and debulking may reduce the genetic heterogeneity of tumor cells, rendering remaining cells less resistant to hedgehog inhibition, she explained.
“It is exciting to see how tumor debulking may reduce tumor burden and heterogeneity, and thus lead to a durable response in extensive tumors,” said Vishal Patel, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and director of the cutaneous oncology program at George Washington University, Washington, who heard the presentation. “More investigation is needed to reproduce these results, but this approach may lead to improved outcomes with targeted therapies,” he said in an interview.
Combination therapy with other agents is another option, and there also seems to be a synergistic effect with radiation, with hedgehog inhibitors increasing cellular response to radiation therapy, Dr. Vidimos said.
Hedgehog inhibitors can also be used to shrink tumors before surgery. One small series found a 27% decrease in the area of the tumor after 3 to 6 months of preoperative vismodegib.
Dr. Vidimos shared another case to illustrate the point.
A 64-year-old woman fainted and presented to the ED with a hemoglobin of 3.2 mg/dL because of chronic blood loss from an ulcerated BCC on her upper back. The lesion measured 25 cm by 9 cm, and was 3.5 cm deep with no bone involvement. The woman was addicted to opioids by the time she presented.
She was started on vismodegib; the ulcer shrunk considerably after 6 months, and the woman underwent a resection. Only one small focus of BCC was found across 78 specimens submitted to Dr. Vidimos for Mohs reading.
Resection was followed by a muscle flap repair and radiation. At 5 and a half years, there is no evidence of disease; the only sign that the lesion had been there was a scar running along the woman’s upper spine.
The approach “was very successful for a very aggressive and worrisome tumor,” Dr. Vidimos said.
Dr. Vidimos did not have any relevant disclosures. Dr. Patel had no relevant disclosures.
MD, a Mohs surgeon and chair of the department of dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic.
She and her colleagues have noticed an accelerated and durable response to hedgehog inhibitors after debulking and are studying cell signaling before and after debulking to better understand the issue.
Dr. Vidimos shared a remarkable case to illustrate the point during a clinical pearls talk at the annual meeting of the American College of Mohs Surgery.
An 82-year-old woman presented with a crusted, hemorrhagic, nodular basal cell carcinoma (BCC) that had overgrown over nearly her entire nose and left lower eyelid. A recurrence of a previous BCC, the tumor had been growing for a decade and had invaded her nasal bones but not the periorbital tissue.
An outside surgeon suggested a full rhinectomy and removal of the lower eyelid, but the woman refused.
Dr. Vidimos decided to treat her with vismodegib, but prior to doing so, she debulked the tumor to help with the pain and bleeding. She did not curette the portion of tumor extending through the ala into the nasal vestibule. “I let the vismodegib take care of that,” she said.
After 9 months, the tumor was virtually gone, with no recurrence after 3 years. Surgical debulking prior to hedgehog inhibition “reduces the tumor burden and may increase the efficacy and shorten the course of therapy,” Dr. Vidimos said.
The hedgehog inhibitors vismodegib (Erivedge) and sonidegib Odomzo are both approved for treating locally advanced BCC, with a complete response of 31% of locally advanced disease with vismodegib, according to one report.
But monotherapy is limited by intolerable side effects, most commonly muscle spasms, alopecia, and dysgeusia. To minimize the impact, Dr. Vidimos generally puts patients on treatment with Monday through Friday dosing and gives them the weekends off, a schedule she and her colleagues have reported works as well as daily dosing.
Still, many patients discontinue the drugs because of the side effects. Hedgehog inhibitors are also expensive and responses aren’t always durable. To increase efficacy and shorten the course of therapy, “we need alternative treatment strategies,” Dr. Vidimos said.
Up-front tumor debulking is one such strategy. Altered cell signaling pathways associated with tissue remodeling might improve response, and debulking may reduce the genetic heterogeneity of tumor cells, rendering remaining cells less resistant to hedgehog inhibition, she explained.
“It is exciting to see how tumor debulking may reduce tumor burden and heterogeneity, and thus lead to a durable response in extensive tumors,” said Vishal Patel, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and director of the cutaneous oncology program at George Washington University, Washington, who heard the presentation. “More investigation is needed to reproduce these results, but this approach may lead to improved outcomes with targeted therapies,” he said in an interview.
Combination therapy with other agents is another option, and there also seems to be a synergistic effect with radiation, with hedgehog inhibitors increasing cellular response to radiation therapy, Dr. Vidimos said.
Hedgehog inhibitors can also be used to shrink tumors before surgery. One small series found a 27% decrease in the area of the tumor after 3 to 6 months of preoperative vismodegib.
Dr. Vidimos shared another case to illustrate the point.
A 64-year-old woman fainted and presented to the ED with a hemoglobin of 3.2 mg/dL because of chronic blood loss from an ulcerated BCC on her upper back. The lesion measured 25 cm by 9 cm, and was 3.5 cm deep with no bone involvement. The woman was addicted to opioids by the time she presented.
She was started on vismodegib; the ulcer shrunk considerably after 6 months, and the woman underwent a resection. Only one small focus of BCC was found across 78 specimens submitted to Dr. Vidimos for Mohs reading.
Resection was followed by a muscle flap repair and radiation. At 5 and a half years, there is no evidence of disease; the only sign that the lesion had been there was a scar running along the woman’s upper spine.
The approach “was very successful for a very aggressive and worrisome tumor,” Dr. Vidimos said.
Dr. Vidimos did not have any relevant disclosures. Dr. Patel had no relevant disclosures.
FROM THE ACMS ANNUAL MEETING