|
||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|
|
|
![]() |
Basic Trial Information
Summary This study is an equivalency study designed as a randomized clinical trial. Patients with a biopsy proven nodular periocular basal cell carcinoma (BCC) who have agreed to have surgical excision will be eligible. Study patients will undergo surgical excision of the lesion and then be randomized to having frozen section or permanent section pathological control. For those patients randomized to permanent section control the sample will be sent to pathology and surgical reconstruction will be performed. Patients randomized to frozen section will have additional margins re-excised before reconstruction depending on the pathologic results. Tumor clearance rates after surgical excision will be compared between the two techniques as a primary study question. Patients will be followed long-term to determine recurrence rates in the two groups. The study is designed to determine if the two techniques are equivalent within a given margin of error with respect to outcome measures. Further Study Information Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) accounts for 80-90% of skin cancers and is the most common skin cancer of the periocular region. Surgical excision is considered the gold-standard in therapy. Previous literature has shown comparable recurrence rates of BCC between surgical excision with frozen section control and surgical excision and permanent section control. To data, there are no prospective studies comparing frozen section control with permanent section control. We hypothesize that short term tumor clearance rates between frozen section and permanent section control will be similar and that long-term tumor recurrence rates will be similar between the two techniques. If we find that these two treatment options are equivalent with respect to margin control and recurrence rates, then considerable time and money savings can be accrued through using permanent section control amongst patients with periocular BCC. The study design is a single-blind randomized controlled trial. Patients who have already agreed to surgical excision of nodular type periocular BCC will be eligible. All patients will undergo a detailed informed consent process. All patients will undergo a punch biopsy to confirm the histopathological diagnosis of BCC. The study design will be a single-blinded, randomized clinical trial. Statistically, the study will be designed as an equivalency study. Prior to randomization the BCC will be excised with 3mm clinical margins in a standard fashion. Subjects will then be randomized to one of two groups: 1. Frozen section control; 2. Permanent section control. For those patients randomized to permanent section control the clinical sample will be sent for pathologic analysis and surgical reconstruction will be performed immediately using standard oculoplastic techniques. Patients randomized to frozen section will have additional margins re-excised if necessary depending on the pathologic results. Oculoplastic reconstruction will be performed after all margins are clear. Patients will undergo examinations at the following times to assess for clinical recurrence: 1. 2 weeks and as necessary thereafter to assess surgical result and wound healing, 2. 6 months, 3. 1 year, 4. yearly up to 5 years. Eligibility Criteria Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Trial Lead Organizations/Sponsors Cancer Research Institute at Queen's University
Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record. Note: Information about this trial is from the ClinicalTrials.gov database. The versions designated for health professionals and patients contain
the same text. Minor
changes may be made to the ClinicalTrials.gov record to standardize the names of study sponsors, sites, and
contacts. Cancer.gov only lists sites that are recruiting patients for active trials, whereas ClinicalTrials.gov lists all sites for all trials. Questions and comments regarding the presented information should
be directed to ClinicalTrials.gov. Back to Top |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
NCI Home |
Images Version |
Contact Us |
Policies |
Accessibility |
Viewing Files |
FOIA |
Site Help |
Site Map
|
![]() A Service of the National Cancer Institute |
![]() |
![]() |