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MOHS SURGERY

Named after Mohs (pronounced “moes”) surgery, also known as Mohs micrographic surgery, is a surgical technique used to treat skin cancer.

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Named after Mohs (pronounced “moes”) surgery, also known as Mohs micrographic surgery, is a surgical technique used to treat skin cancer. Dr. Frederic Mohs, the surgeon who invented the technique back in the 1930s, the surgery is used to treat many skin cancers, including basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), as well as some melanomas, the least common but most deadly type of skin cancer. 

“Mohs surgery is also used when tumors come back after traditional excision surgery and when tumors are particularly aggressive or large,” says Dr. Cameron Chesnut, a dermatologic surgeon in Spokane, Washington. 

With the more traditional excision approach to skin cancer removal, the surgeon cuts up to a 1 cm margin of extra tissue as “insurance,” to ensure removal of all the cancerous cells, and the patient has to wait up to a week to get pathology results confirming that the cancer is gone.

In contrast, Mohs is performed in precise stages while the patient waits: the surgeon removes a layer of tissue, examines it under a microscope, and then—if any cancer cells remain—removes another layer of tissue in exactly the mapped out area. This process is repeated until the margins are clean, meaning that no cancer cells remain. “It leaves you with the smallest scar possible when compared to other treatments,” says Dr. Nirmal Nathan, a Miami-based plastic surgeon.

The procedure can only be done by a dermatologic surgeon specially trained in the Mohs method. (Many surgeons who claim to be doing Mohs actually utilize a more traditional excisional method.)

Depending on the size, location, depth, and type of tumor they have, some people will need reconstructive surgery after Mohs. That reconstructive procedure can be done by the Mohs surgeon on the same day, or by a plastic surgeon. According to Dr. Nathan, Mohs “allows you to have more advanced reconstructive techniques that involve moving nearby tissue, because the site is confirmed to be cancer-free on the same day.”

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