Mohs surgery can also be used to treating melanoma. However, moh’s surgery has a higher cure rate if treating melanoma in situ. It has been used in the removal of melanoma-in-situ (cure rate 77% to 98% depending on surgeon), and certain types of melanoma (cure rate 52%). Another study of melanoma-in-situ revealed Mohs cure rate of 95% for frozen section Mohs, and 98 to 99% for fixed tissue Mohs method. In situ is a condition that a cancer is still not become cancer yet.
However, mohs surgery is appropriate when:
- The skin cancer is in an area where it is important to preserve healthy tissue for maximum functional and cosmetic result, such as: eyelids, nose, ears, lips, fingers, toes, genitals.
- The skin cancer was treated previously and recurred.
- Scar tissue exists in the area of the cancer.
- The skin cancer is large.
- The edges of the cancer cannot be clearly defined.
- The skin cancer is growing rapidly or uncontrollably.
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