Litcius/Paper detail

Swiss Recommendations for Cutaneous Basal Cell Carcinoma

Egle Ramelyte, Mirjam Nägeli, Robert E. Hunger, Rastine Merat, Olivier Gaide, Alexander A. Navarini, Antonio Cozzio, Nikolaus B. Wagner, Lara Valeska Maul, Reinhard Dummer

2022Dermatology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common nonmelanoma skin cancer in Switzerland and worldwide. Most BCCs can be treated in a curative setting. However, patients can develop locally destructive and, rarely, metastatic tumors that require a different treatment approach. The clinical subtype of individual lesions provides prognostic information and influences management decisions. Surgical excision, topical therapies, and radiotherapy are highly effective in the majority of subtypes as well as in low- and high-risk diseases. For patients with low-risk diseases and superficial tumors not amenable to surgery, several nonsurgical alternatives are available. Systemic therapy is indicated for high-risk BCCs, which are not amenable to either surgery or radiotherapy. Hedgehog pathway inhibitors (HHI) are currently approved. Other therapeutic options such as immune checkpoint inhibitors show promising results in clinical trials. This first version of Swiss recommendations for diagnosis and management of BCC was prepared through extensive literature review and an advisory board consensus of expert dermatologists and oncologists in Switzerland. The present guidelines recommend therapies based on a multidisciplinary team approach and rate of recurrence for individual lesions. Based on the risk of recurrence, two distinct groups have been identified: low-risk (easy-to-treat) and high-risk (difficult-to-treat) tumors. Based on these classifications, evidence-based recommendations of available therapies are presented herein.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBasal cell carcinomaSkin cancerRadiation therapyDermatologyMohs surgeryClinical trialVismodegibBasal cellOncologyIntensive care medicineCancerInternal medicineNonmelanoma Skin Cancer StudiesCancer and Skin LesionsHedgehog Signaling Pathway Studies