RETROSPECTIVE STUDY OF PATTERNS OF FAILURE IN CUTANEOUS SQUAMOUS CELL CARCINOMA TREATED WITH PRIMARY SURGERY: A TATA MEDICAL CENTER EXPERIENCE

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Abstract

Background

Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) accounts for a significant proportion of skin malignancies in India, yet data on patterns of failure, particularly for extremity and truncal primaries remain scarce. We audited a decade of surgically treated cSCC at a tertiary cancer center to characterize failure patterns and associated risk factors.

Methods

This retrospective study included 161 patients with histopathologically confirmed cSCC treated surgically between January 2013 and December 2023, comprising 127 upfront/residual and 34 recurrent presentations. Primary sites were extremities (64%), head and neck (26%) and torso (10%). 21 patients had Marjolin’s ulcer. Outcomes included local, regional and distant failure, recurrence-free survival and overall survival. Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) staging was applied to assess prognostic utility. Statistical analysis was done using Kaplan-Meier and competing-risk methods.

Results

Median follow-up was 2.4 years. Regional recurrence was the predominant failure pattern seen in 26 patients, local recurrence was seen in 14 patients and distant metastasis in 13. The 3-year cumulative incidences of local, regional and distant failure were 11%, 19% and 8.4% respectively. Rates of regional recurrence were substantially higher than Western series. Extremity primaries accounted for 19/26 regional recurrences. BWH T2b disease showed the highest regional failure rate (27.6%), exceeding T3 (17.8%) and T2a (6%) with perineural invasion significantly associated with regional failure in T2b/T3 tumors (p<0.001). Median time to regional metastasis was 8.4 months. At 3 years, overall survival was 77% and progression-free survival was 64%.

Conclusion

Regional recurrence is the dominant mode of failure in this cohort, at rates higher than most published series, with extremity primaries and BWH T2b staging identifying particularly high-risk subgroups. These findings highlight the need for a comprehensive staging system encompassing non head and neck cSCC and support prospective evaluation of elective nodal staging and adjuvant radiotherapy in high-risk patients, alongside intensified surveillance.

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