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Abstract

Medicine

Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cavity Cancer: This is the Way

Published: May 10th, 2021

DOI:

10.3791/62446

1Department of Pathology, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, 2Department of Otorhinolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, 3Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, 4Department of Dermatology, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, 5PALGA foundation, The nationwide network and registry of histo- and cytopathology, 6Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Leiden University Medical Center

Abstract

The goal of head and neck oncological surgery is complete tumor resection with adequate resection margins while preserving acceptable function and appearance. For oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC), different studies showed that only 15%-26% of all resections are adequate. A major reason for the low number of adequate resections is the lack of information during surgery; the margin status is only available after the final histopathologic assessment, days after surgery.

The surgeons and pathologists at the Erasmus MC University Medical Center in Rotterdam started the implementation of specimen-driven intraoperative assessment of resection margins (IOARM) in 2013, which became the standard of care in 2015. This method enables the surgeon to turn an inadequate resection into an adequate resection by performing an additional resection during the initial surgery. Intraoperative assessment is supported by a relocation method procedure that allows accurate identification of inadequate margins (found on the specimen) in the wound bed.

The implementation of this protocol resulted in an improvement of adequate resections from 15%-40%. However, the specimen-driven IOARM is not widely adopted because grossing fresh tissue is counter-intuitive for pathologists. The fear exists that grossing fresh tissue will deteriorate the anatomical orientation, shape, and size of the specimen and therefore will affect the final histopathologic assessment. These possible negative effects are countered by the described protocol. Here, the protocol for specimen-driven IOARM is presented in detail, as performed at the institute.

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Keywords Intraoperative Assessment

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