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May 14, 2019 13 mins

Skin cancer is common in the head and neck area because of exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the sun. Dr. Jonathan Giurintano discusses the most common types of skin cancers and how we treat them.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: MedStar Washington Hospital Center presents Medical Intel where our healthcare team shares health and wellness insights and gives you the inside story on advances in medicine.

Host: We’re speaking with Dr. Jonathan Giurintano, a head and neck cancer surgeon at MedStar Washington Hospital Center. Thank you for joining us, Dr. Giurintano.

Dr. Giurintano: Thank you so much for having me today.

Host: Today we’re discussing treatment options for skin cancers of the head and neck. Dr. Giurintano, how common are skin cancers of the head and neck compared to skin cancers that affect other areas of the body?

Dr. Giurintano: Skin cancers in the head and neck region are extremely, extremely common. The most common types of skin cancers (these are basal cell carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas and melanomas), are found in areas of the body that receive exposure to the UV radiation from the sun. As the head and neck are the most frequently sun-exposed areas of the body, it follows that these are also extremely common areas that we see skin cancers, often occurring on the scalp, the face, the ears, nose, cheeks or on the neck.

Host: In less visible areas of the body, cancerous moles, spots and other tissues often are removed. How do you approach treatment of the very visible tissue of the head and neck?

Dr. Giurintano: So, it’s similar to other areas of the body, especially for larger skin cancers. The best treatment is typically surgical excision. Our colleagues, the dermatologists, are often times specially trained to perform a procedure called Mohs micrographic surgery. So, this is actually a very special type of surgery in which the skin cancer is removed and normal appearing skin around the periphery of the skin cancer, and this is sectioned by the dermatopathologist and looked at under the microscope at the time of the surgery to confirm that there is no further cancer cell present. By doing this, the dermatologists are able to not only completely excise all cancerous cells from the region of the skin cancer, but oftentimes are able to limit the amount of normal skin that must be sacrificed in order to completely resect the skin cancer. In areas such as the nose, the ears or the cheeks, there oftentimes is not much elasticity to the skin that allows for the defect in the skin to be closed simply. Other times, the defect might be closed simply, however the resultant scar might result in an unattractive cosmetic appearance. So, for these types of patients, we do have special ways that we can rearrange the tissue on the face in order to not only reconstruct the defect left behind by the resection of the skin cancer, but also do so in a way that the scar is camouflaged and has the most cosmetically appealing appearance.   

Dr. Giurintano: Well, basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma are the most common types of skin cancers that we treat. Other skin cancers such as melanoma require different types of treatment.

Host: What makes treatment different for melanoma?

Dr. Giurintano: So, one of the concerning features of melanoma is that we really cannot do Mohs micrographic surgery for melanomas. Whereas Mohs surgery relies on freezing the samples of normal skin from around the periphery of the tumor and looking at that sample under the microscope with very good success rates for ruling out the presence of cancerous cells, we know that that technology does not work quite as well for melanoma cells. As a

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