Abstract

BACKGROUND Dense infiltrates in association with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) or basal cell carcinoma (BCC) in patients with underlying chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) may complicate pathologic interpretation of histologic margins. OBJECTIVE The study was conducted to determine the frequency of identifying dense inflammatory infiltrates in frozen histologic sections during Mohs operation for BCC or SCC in patients with CLL and organ-transplant recipients, to characterize the infiltrate (reactive versus leukemic) in CLL, and to estimate the subclinical tumor extension in patients with CLL, transplant recipients, and control subjects undergoing Mohs procedure. METHODS Frozen sections of head and neck BCC and SCC obtained during Mohs procedures in patients with CLL, organ transplant recipients, and a control group were reviewed retrospectively. Biopsy specimens of CLL with dense infiltrates were assessed with immunohistochemical stains. Subclinical tumor extension (postoperative defect size minus preoperative tumor size) was evaluated in each group. RESULTS Dense infiltrates were found in tumors of 20 of 55 patients with CLL (36%), 1 of 8 transplant recipients (13%), and 1 of 105 controls (1%). In patients with CLL, 75% of the dense infiltrates were B-cell leukemic. Compared with controls, the mean subclinical tumor extension was larger in patients with CLL (P = 0.029) and in transplant recipients (P = 0.55). CONCLUSION Dense leukemic infiltrates associated with BCC or SCC in CLL may complicate pathologic interpretation of Mohs surgical histologic margins and may be associated with larger postoperative defects relative to preoperative clinical tumor appearance. In patients with CLL, as in transplant recipients, SCC seems more likely to develop than BCC.

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