This site is intended for healthcare professionals

Go to /sign-in page

You can view 5 more pages before signing in

Go to /pro/cpd-dashboard page

This page is worth 0.05 CPD credits. CPD dashboard

Go to /account/subscription-details page

This page is worth 0.05 CPD credits. Upgrade to Pro

Treatment

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

Authoring team

Primary aim of treatment is complete removal or destruction of the BCC lesion to result in cure and minimise the risk of recurrence:

  • BCCs are usually slow-growing tumours that only very rarely metastasize (spread) to other distant parts of the body (0.0028% to 0.55% of advanced BCCs metastasize (1)
  • should also be balanced against the patient's requirement for a good/acceptable cosmetic result (2)
  • choice of intervention is determined by tumour factors such as the histological/clinical subtype of BCC, site, size, whether primary or recurrent tumour, as well as patient factors (e.g. comorbidities, importance of cosmesis) and other factors such as available resources
  • interventions are split into surgical and non-surgical interventions include:
    • generally, surgical interventions are used as firstline treatments for both high-risk and low-risk BCC subtypes and non-surgical interventions are usually reserved for low-risk BCC subtypes where histological margins are less important (2)

    • radiotherapy and electrochemotherapy are the exceptions - tend to be used for high-risk BCCs not amenable to surgical intervention

    • surgical interventions:
      • surgical excision (with predetermined margins)
      • surgical excision (with frozen section margin control)
      • Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS - takes serial horizontal frozen sections intraoperatively to examine histologically the entire surgical margin to confirm complete tumour clearance)
      • curettage and cautery
      • cryosurgery (synonymous for cryotherapy, delivered by a variety of methods)
      • laser therapy (ablative lasers, pulsed dye laser)
    • non-surgical (medical) interventions
      • radiotherapy
      • topical imiquimod
      • topical 5-fluorouracil
      • photodynamic therapy
      • ingenol mebutate
      • intralesional interferon, fluorouracil
      • electrochemotherapy
      • others (solasodine glycosides, sinecatechins, diclofenac, calcitriol)

A systematic review concluded (3):

  • Surgical interventions have the lowest recurrence rates, and there may be slightly fewer recurrences with MMS over SE for high-risk facial primary BCC (low-certainty evidence). Non-surgical treatments, when used for low-risk BCC, are less effective than surgical treatments, but recurrence rates are acceptable and cosmetic outcomes are probably superior. Of the non-surgical treatments, imiquimod has the bestevidence to support its efficacy.

Reference:

  • Ting PT et al. Metastatic basal cell carcinoma: report of two cases and literature review. Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery 2005;9(1):10-5.
  • Madan V, Lear JT. Basal cell carcinoma. In: Rook's Textbook of Dermatology, Ninth Edition. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2016.
  • Thomson J et al. Interventions for basal cell carcinoma of the skin. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2020, Issue 11. Art. No.: CD003412. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD003412.pub3.

Related pages

Create an account to add page annotations

Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.