Mohs micrographic surgery reduces the risk of reconstruction with positive margins, repeat surgeries, and time to definitive reconstruction compared to conventional excision of hand and foot melanomas: A retrospective cohort study.

Publication date: Jul 01, 2025

Hand and foot melanomas (HFMs) have increased risk for positive margins after conventional excision (CE). Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) may improve margin clearance prior to reconstruction. Rates of reconstruction with positive margins have not been compared after CE versus MMS for HFMs. To compare rates of reconstruction with positive margins after CE or MMS of HFMs. In situ and invasive melanomas of hands and feet treated with CE or MMS with melanoma antigen recognized by T cells-1 immunostaining between 1994 and 2023 were identified from an academic center. The primary outcome was rate of reconstruction with positive margins after CE versus MMS. Secondary outcomes were repeat excision and time to definitive reconstruction after CE versus MMS. Of 269 HFMs, 180 (66. 91%) were treated with MMS versus 89 (33. 09%) with CE. Reconstruction with positive margins after initial excision was significantly more likely after CE (20. 22%) versus MMS (0%) (P < .001). Compared to MMS, CE had higher rates of repeat excisions (20. 22% vs 1. 67%) (P < .001) and longer mean time to definitive reconstruction (11. 35 vs 1. 44 days) (P < .001). Single-site, retrospective design. Compared to MMS, CE of HFMs has higher rates of reconstruction with positive margins, repeat surgeries, and a longer time to definitive reconstruction.

Concepts Keywords
Academic acral
Antigen Aged
Longer Aged, 80 and over
Retrospective amputation
Surgery conventional excision
Female
Foot
foot
Hand
hand
Humans
incomplete excision
Male
margin status
Margins of Excision
Melanoma
melanoma
Middle Aged
Mohs micrographic surgery
Mohs Surgery
Neoplasm Invasiveness
Plastic Surgery Procedures
positive margin
reconstruction
Reoperation
Retrospective Studies
Skin Neoplasms
specialty site
Time Factors
wide local excision

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH melanomas
pathway KEGG Melanoma
disease MESH Neoplasm Invasiveness
disease MESH Skin Neoplasms

Original Article

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