Abstract

BackgroundReproducible, high-quality surgery is a key point in the management of cancer patients. Quality indicators for surgical treatment of melanoma has been presented with benchmarks but data on morbidity are still limited. This study presents the quality indicators on morbidity after surgical treatment for non-metastatic skin melanoma in an Italian registry.MethodsData were extracted from the Central National Melanoma Registry (CNMR) promoted by the Italian Melanoma Intergroup (IMI). All surgical procedures (WE, SNLB or LFND) for non-metastatic skin melanoma between January 2011 and February 2017 were evaluated for inclusion in the study. Only centers with adequate completeness of information (> 80%) were included in the study. Short-term complications (wound infection, dehiscence, skin graft failure and seroma) were investigated.ResultsWound infection rate was 1.1% (0.4 to 2.7%) in WE, 1.3% (0.7 to 2.5%) in SLNB and 4.1% (2.1 to 8.0%) in LFND. Wound dehiscence rate was 2.0% (0.8 to 5.1%) in WE, 0.9% (0.2 to 3.0%) in SLNB and 2.8% (0.9 to 8.6%) in LFND. Seroma rate was 4.2% (1.5 to 11.1%) in SLNB and 15.1% (4.6 to 39.9%) in LFND. Unreliable information was found on skin graft failure.ConclusionsOur findings contribute to available literature in setting up the recommended standards for melanoma centers, thus improving the quality of surgery offered to patients. A consensus on the core issues around surgical morbidity is needed to provide practical guidance on morbidity prevention and management.

Highlights

  • Reproducible, high-quality surgery is a key point in the management of cancer patients

  • Our findings contribute to available literature in setting up the recommended standards for melanoma centers, improving the quality of surgery offered to patients

  • The surgical strategy involves a combination of wide excision (WE), sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) and radical lymph node dissection (LFND), according to cancer staging

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Reproducible, high-quality surgery is a key point in the management of cancer patients. Quality indicators for surgical treatment of melanoma has been presented with benchmarks but data on morbidity are still limited. This study presents the quality indicators on morbidity after surgical treatment for non-metastatic skin melanoma in an Italian registry. In non-metastatic melanoma (i.e. without clinically evident regional lymph node or distant metastasis), surgery is the mainstay of treatment [2]. WE can be virtually part of the surgical management of all patients with skin melanoma, SNLB is recommended based on the primary tumor thickness and LFND may be required in patients with positive sentinel node [3]. Reproducible, high-quality surgery is a key point in the management and prognosis of cancer patients [4, 5]. Cancer surgery is not always standardized, limiting the application of such approach [6]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call