Author:
Neumann Felix,Straub Xenia,Mrosk Friedrich,Rubarth Kerstin,Wolfsberg Johanna,Piwonski Iris,Doll Christian,Voss Jan,Heiland Max,Kreutzer Kilian,Koerdt Steffen
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
Intraoperative frozen section analysis (IFSA) is a well-established procedure for determining the intraoperative soft tissue resection status in patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Margin status is a major predictor of the patient´s outcome, histologically free margins of ≥ 5 mm are demanded. This study evaluates the accuracy of IFSA, the impact of margin status and the impact of intraoperative margin revision on disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS).
Methods
This retrospective study included 213 patients with OSCC. IFSA results were compared with definitive histopathological reports, Kaplan–Meier analysis was performed. Cut-off values were calculated for resection margins considering known risk factors.
Results
IFSA showed positive margins in 8 cases (3.8%). Kaplan–Meier analysis revealed no significant differences for OS or DFS if R0-status was achieved by initial resection or immediate re-resection.
Final histopathological evaluation revealed false-positive IFSA in 3/8 cases (37.5%) and false-negative IFSA in 1/205 cases (0.5%). Sensitivity was 83.3% and specificity was 98.6%.
Analysis of optimal cut-off values showed no general need for larger resection margins in patients with risk factors. Cut-off values were slightly higher for patients with the risk factor alcohol consumption (7 mm for OS and DFS) or pN + ECS- disease (7 mm for DFS). Optimal cut-off values for tumour-margin-distance were around 6 mm.
Conclusion
IFSA provides a valuable assessment method for intraoperative soft tissue resection margins. Risk factors seemingly do not significantly influence the extent of tumour resection.
Funder
Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC