Meier Jeremy D, Oliver Dana A, Varvares Mark A
St. Louis University School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, 3635 Vista Ave. at Grand Blvd, P.O. Box 15250, St. Louis, MO 63110-0250, USA.
Head Neck. 2005 Nov;27(11):952-8. doi: 10.1002/hed.20269.
Our aim was to investigate the ways in which surgeons who perform head and neck ablative procedures on a regular basis define margins, how they use frozen sections to evaluate margins, and the effect of chemoradiation on determining tumor margins.
A custom-designed questionnaire was mailed to members of the American Head and Neck Society asking members how they evaluate and define tumor margins.
Of 1500 surveys mailed, 476 completed surveys were received. The most common response for distance of a clear pathologic margin was >5 mm on microscopic evaluation. A margin containing carcinoma in situ was considered a positive margin by most, but most did not consider a margin containing dysplasia a positive margin. When initial frozen section margins are positive for tumor and further resection results in negative frozen section margins, 90% consider the patient's margin negative. Most surgeons sample the frozen section from the surgical bed rather than from the main specimen. Nearly half use wider margins when resecting tumors treated with neoadjuvant therapy. When resecting recurrent or residual tumors treated with previous chemoradiation therapy, most resect to the pretreatment margin.
No uniform criteria to define a clear surgical margin exist among practicing head and neck surgeons. Most head and neck surgeons consider margins clear if resection completed after an initial positive frozen section margin reveals negative margins, but this view is not shared by all. Most surgeons take frozen sections from the surgical bed; however, error may occur when identifying the positive margin within the surgical bed. The definition of a clear tumor margin after chemoradiation is unclear. These questions could be addressed in a multicenter prospective trial.
我们的目的是调查定期进行头颈部切除手术的外科医生确定切缘的方式、他们如何使用冰冻切片评估切缘,以及放化疗对确定肿瘤切缘的影响。
向美国头颈外科学会会员邮寄一份定制问卷,询问会员如何评估和确定肿瘤切缘。
共邮寄1500份调查问卷,收到476份完整回复。在显微镜评估中,病理切缘阴性的最常见距离是>5mm。大多数人认为包含原位癌的切缘为阳性切缘,但大多数人不认为包含发育异常的切缘为阳性切缘。当初始冰冻切片切缘肿瘤阳性而进一步切除后冰冻切片切缘阴性时,90%的人认为患者切缘阴性。大多数外科医生从手术床而非主要标本取材进行冰冻切片检查。近一半人在切除接受新辅助治疗的肿瘤时采用更宽的切缘。在切除先前接受放化疗的复发性或残留性肿瘤时,大多数人切除至预处理切缘。
执业头颈外科医生中不存在统一的明确手术切缘标准。大多数头颈外科医生认为,如果在初始冰冻切片切缘阳性后完成的切除显示切缘阴性,则切缘为阴性,但并非所有人都持这种观点。大多数外科医生从手术床取材进行冰冻切片检查;然而,在确定手术床内的阳性切缘时可能会出现误差。放化疗后明确肿瘤切缘的定义尚不清楚。这些问题可在多中心前瞻性试验中解决。