The impact of frozen sections on final surgical margins in squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity and lips: A retrospective analysis over an 11 years period
Head & Neck Oncology 2011, 3:56 doi:10.1186/1758-3284-3-56
Published: 30 December 2011Abstract (provisional)
Background
Taking intraoperative frozen sections (FS) is a widely used procedure in oncologic surgery. However so far no evidence of an association of FS analysis and premalignant changes in the surgical margin exists. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of FS on different categories of the final margins of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the oral cavity and lips.
Methods
FS, pT-stage, grading, and tumor localization of 178 patients with SCC of the oral cavity and lips were compared by uni- and multivariate analysis in patients with positive, dysplastic and negative surgical margin status.
Results
Performed on 111 patients (62.4%), intraoperative FS did not have any statistically significant influence on final margin status, independent of whether it was positive (p=0.40), dysplastic (p=0.70), or negative (p=0.70). Positive surgical margins in permanent sections were significantly associated with pT4-tumors (OR 5.61, p=0.001). The chance for negative margins in permanent sections was significantly higher in tumors located in the tongue (OR 4.70, p=0.01).
Conclusions
Our data suggests that intraoperative FS in SCC can be useful in selected cases. However it is not advisable as a routine approach.