Institutional Experience of Treatment and Outcomes for Cutaneous Periauricular Squamous Cell Carcinoma

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Abstract

Objectives: To report our institutional experience, management, and outcomes of cutaneous periauricular squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Study Design: Retrospective chart review. Setting: Tertiary academic center. Subjects: Patients undergoing treatment of cutaneous periauricular SCC from 2000 to 2016. Results: A total of 112 patients had a median follow-up of 24.5 months, a mean ± SD age of 75.7 ± 10.6 years, and a strong male predominance (93.8%). Site distribution shows 87 (77.7%) auricular, 26 (23.2%) preauricular, and 10 (8.8%) postauricular lesions. Of auricular lesions, tumors involved the tragus (n = 3, 3.4%), helix/antihelix (n = 47, 54.0%), conchal bowl (n = 31, 35.6%), external auditory canal (n = 18, 16.1%), and lobule (n = 3, 3.4%). Most patients presented at stage I (52.7%) versus stages II (28.6%), III (6.3%), and IV (12.5%). Patients were largely treated surgically with primary tumor resection ranging from wide local excision to lateral temporal bone resection (± parotidectomy and neck dissection), with 17.0% and 5.4% receiving adjuvant radiation and chemoradiation, respectively. Metastatic spread was seen to the parotid (25.9%) and neck (26.8%), with most common cervical spread to level II. Overall survival, disease-specific survival, and disease-free survival at 3 years were 62%, 89%, and 56%, respectively. Nodal disease was associated with worse disease-specific survival (P

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Kovatch, K. J., Smith, J. D., Birkeland, A. C., Hanks, J. E., Jawad, R., McLean, S. A., … Basura, G. J. (2019). Institutional Experience of Treatment and Outcomes for Cutaneous Periauricular Squamous Cell Carcinoma. OTO Open, 3(3). https://doi.org/10.1177/2473974X19875077

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