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- Murad Alam, Irene B Helenowksi, Joel L Cohen, Ross Levy, Nanette Liégeois, Erick A Mafong, Maureen A Mooney, Kishwer S Nehal, Tri H Nguyen, Desiree Ratner, Tom Rohrer, Chrysalyne D Schmults, Stephen Tan, Jaeyoung Yoon, Rohit Kakar, Alfred W Rademaker, Lucile E White, and Simon Yoo.
- Department of Dermatology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA. m-alam@northwestern.edu
- Dermatol Surg. 2013 Jan 1; 39 (1 Pt 1): 51-5.
BackgroundThere are few data to indicate whether the type of final wound defect is associated with the type of post-Mohs repair.ObjectiveTo determine the methods of reconstruction that Mohs surgeons typically select and, secondarily, to assess the association between the method and the number of stages, tumor type, anatomic location, and patient and surgeon characteristics.MethodsStatistical analysis of procedure logs of 20 representative young to mid-career Mohs surgeons.ResultsThe number of stages associated with various repairs were different (analysis of variance, p < .001.). Linear repairs, associated with the fewest stages (1.5), were used most commonly (43-55% of defects). Primary repairs were used for 20.2% to 35.3% of defects of the nose, eyelids, ears, and lips. Local flaps were performed typically after two stages of Mohs surgery (range 1.98-2.06). Referral for repair and skin grafts were associated with cases with more stages (2.16 and 2.17 stages, respectively). Experienced surgeons were nominally more likely perform flaps than grafts. Regression analyses did not indicate any association between patient sex and closure type (p = .99) or practice location and closure type (p = .99).ConclusionsMost post-Mohs closures are linear repairs, with more bilayered linear repairs more likely at certain anatomic sites and after a larger number of stages.© 2012 by the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery, Inc. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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