Publication | Closed Access
Comparison of Mohs Micrographic Surgery and Wide Excision for Extramammary Pagetʼs Disease
28
Citations
10
References
2003
Year
Background Extramammary PagetSurgical OncologyMedicineExtramammary Pagetʼs DiseaseSurgical PathologyHistopathologyPathologyWide ExcisionCytopathologyEndocrine SurgerySurgeryMohs Micrographic ExcisionDermatologyDermatopathologyOncologyDermatological SurgeryMohs Micrographic Surgery
BACKGROUND Extramammary Paget's disease is a rare cutaneous adenocarcinoma that occurs in an apocrine gland distribution mainly in the anogenital region. OBJECTIVE To formulate treatment recommendations for this rare disease, we examined clinical and follow-up data of patients with it. METHODS A retrospective review is given about the treatment and outcome for 95 patients at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, and Scottsdale, Arizona, between 1976 and 2001. The literature regarding diagnosis and treatment of this disease is also reviewed. RESULTS Of the 95 patients, 86 had primary disease and 9 had recurrent disease. At mean follow-up (wide excision, 65 months; Mohs surgery, 24 months), disease had recurred in 18 of 83 (22%) who underwent standard wide excision, compared with recurrence in 1 of 12 (8%) who had the Mohs micrographic excision. CONCLUSION Mohs micrographic surgery compares favorably with wide excision. Intraoperative immunostaining with cytokeratin 7 is helpful in delineating disease, as are preoperative scouting biopsies and photodynamic diagnosis.
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