Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3211354 | Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology | 2006 | 7 Pages |
BackgroundAlthough curettage and electrodesiccation (C&E) is widely used to treat basal cell carcinoma, whether electrodesiccation improves outcome is unknown.ObjectiveWe sought to compare cure rates of curettage alone with those of C&E.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective records review of patients treated with curettage alone at 5-year follow-up or longer that extracted data about tumor location, size, histologic subtype, biopsy specimen margin involvement, and recurrence, as well as data about the medical history of patients treated in a dermatology clinic in a tertiary-care academic medical institution.ResultsBiopsy-proven tumors (302) amenable to treatment with C&E and treated by a single investigator with curettage alone had a 5-year cure rate of 96.03%, with minimal complications (hypopigmentation, scarring). Tumors involving more than 50% of the deep edge of the shave biopsy specimen had an increased risk of recurrence.LimitationsThis is a retrospective study based on historic controls.ConclusionFor nonaggressive basal cell carcinoma, curettage alone has a cure rate similar to the published rates for C&E.