| Literature DB >> 32159810 |
William C Fix1, Christopher J Miller2, Jeremy R Etzkorn2, Thuzar M Shin2, Nicole Howe2, Joseph F Sobanko2.
Abstract
Importance: Patients are satisfied when surgical outcomes meet their expectations. Dissatisfaction with surgical scars is one of the most common reasons that patients sue surgeons who perform Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS). Objective: To measure the accuracy of patient and physician estimations of scar length prior to skin cancer removal with MMS. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study was conducted between December 1, 2017, and February 28, 2018, at the MMS clinic of a single tertiary referral center health system. A total of 101 adults presenting for MMS for treatment of facial skin cancers volunteered for this study, and 86 surgeons who performed the MMS procedure participated. Main Outcomes and Measures: Patients and physicians independently drew the anticipated scar length on the patients' skin prior to surgery. Preoperative estimates by patients and surgeons were compared with actual postoperative scar length.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32159810 PMCID: PMC7066479 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.0725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Demographic and Health Characteristics of the Study Cohort
| Characteristic | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| All cases | 101 (100) |
| Age, y | |
| <65 | 44 (43.6) |
| ≥65 | 57 (56.4) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| White, non-Hispanic | 99 (98.0) |
| White, Hispanic | 1 (1.0) |
| Not specified | 1 (1.0) |
| Sex | |
| Female | 42 (41.6) |
| Male | 57 (56.4) |
| Not specified | 2 (2.0) |
| Smoking status | |
| Smoker | 10 (9.9) |
| Nonsmoker | 91 (90.1) |
| History of Mohs micrographic surgery | |
| Yes | 50 (49.5) |
| No | 51 (50.5) |
| Preoperative consultation | |
| Yes | 33 (32.7) |
| No | 68 (67.3) |
| Use of resources | |
| Yes | 65 (64.4) |
| No | 36 (35.6) |
| Diagnosis | |
| Basal cell carcinoma | 42 (41.6) |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | 32 (31.7) |
| Melanoma or melanoma in situ | 21 (20.8) |
| Other | 6 (5.9) |
| Reconstruction type | |
| Linear closure | 56 (55.4) |
| Local flap | 21 (20.8) |
| Interpolation flap | 7 (6.9) |
| Graft | 8 (7.9) |
| Secondary intention | 4 (4.0) |
| Wedge repair | 2 (2.0) |
| Other or not specified | 3 (3.0) |
| No. of stages | |
| 1 | 86 (85.1) |
| ≥2 | 15 (14.9) |
Scar Length by Actual, Patient, and Surgeon Estimates
| Parameter | Median (IQR) [Range] |
|---|---|
| Postoperative scar length, mm | 47 (32-70) [9-180] |
| Patient preoperative length estimate, mm | 20 (13-30) [4-80] |
| Surgeon preoperative length estimate, mm | 41 (30-65) [10-130] |
| Ratio of actual length to patient length estimate | 2.2 (1.5-3.6) [0.1-16.2] |
| Ratio of actual length to surgeon length estimate | 1.1 (1.0-1.2) [0.2-6.2] |
Abbreviation: IQR, interquartile range.
Figure 1. Ratios of Actual Postoperative Scar Length After Mohs Micrographic Surgery to Surgeon- and Patient-Estimated Preoperative Scar Length
Each dot represents the ratio of the actual postoperative to estimated preoperative scar length. Center lines and error bars indicate median values and interquartile ranges, respectively. The median actual scar length was 2.2 times larger than the patients’ estimates. Physicians estimated more accurately, with a 1.1 ratio of median actual scar length to estimated scar length.
Figure 2. Comparison of Surgeon and Patient Scar Estimates
Patients were significantly more likely to underestimate scar length than surgeons performing Mohs micrographic surgery and significantly less likely to correctly estimate scar length. Overestimation of the scar length was equally uncommon among patients and physicians.
Figure 3. Actual Scar Length and Patient Estimated Scar Length
The y = x line represents a perfectly accurate estimate. The points to the left of x = y represent patients who estimated a scar longer than the actual scar. The points to the right of x = y represent patients who estimated scars shorter than the actual scar. The line indicating nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) plus melanoma suggests that patients underestimated the scar by a larger margin as the actual scar length increased.