treatment
Last edited 12/2020 and last reviewed 12/2020
Primary aim of treatment is complete removal or destruction of the BCC lesion to result in cure and minimise the risk of recurrence:
- BCCs are usually slow-growing tumours that only very rarely metastasize (spread) to other distant parts of the body (0.0028% to 0.55% of advanced BCCs metastasize (1)
- should also be balanced against the patient's requirement for a good/acceptable cosmetic result (2)
- choice of intervention is determined by tumour factors such as the histological/clinical subtype of BCC, site, size, whether primary or recurrent tumour, as well as patient factors (e.g. comorbidities, importance of cosmesis) and other factors such as available resources
- interventions are split into surgical and non-surgical interventions
- generally, surgical interventions are used as firstline
treatments for both high-risk and low-risk BCC subtypes and
non-surgical interventions are usually reserved for low-risk BCC
subtypes where histological margins are less important (2)
- radiotherapy and electrochemotherapy are the exceptions - tend to be used for high-risk BCCs not amenable to surgical
intervention
- surgical interventions:
- surgical excision (with predetermined margins)
- surgical excision (with frozen section margin control)
- Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS - takes serial horizontal frozen sections intraoperatively to examine histologically the entire surgical margin to confirm complete tumour clearance)
- curettage and cautery
- cryosurgery (synonymous for cryotherapy, delivered by a variety of methods)
- laser therapy (ablative lasers, pulsed dye laser)
- non-surgical (medical) interventions include:
- radiotherapy
- topical imiquimod
- topical 5-fluorouracil
- photodynamic therapy
- ingenol mebutate
- intralesional interferon, fluorouracil
- electrochemotherapy
- others (solasodine glycosides, sinecatechins, diclofenac, calcitriol)
A systematic review concluded (3):
- Surgical interventions have the lowest recurrence rates, and there may be slightly fewer recurrences with MMS over SE for high-risk facial primary BCC (low-certainty evidence). Non-surgical treatments, when used for low-risk BCC, are less effective than surgical treatments, but recurrence rates are acceptable and cosmetic outcomes are probably superior. Of the non-surgical treatments, imiquimod has the bestevidence to support its efficacy.
Reference:
- Ting PT et al. Metastatic basal cell carcinoma: report of two cases and literature review. Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery 2005;9(1):10-5.
- Madan V, Lear JT. Basal cell carcinoma. In: Rook's Textbook of Dermatology, Ninth Edition. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2016.
- Thomson J et al. Interventions for basal cell carcinoma of the skin. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2020, Issue 11. Art. No.: CD003412. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD003412.pub3.