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Abstract Background Positive surgical margin rates remain high in head and neck cancer surgery. Relocation is challenging given the complex, three‐dimensional (3D) anatomy. Methods Prospective, multi‐institutional study to determine accuracy of head and neck surgeons and pathologists relocating margins on virtual 3D specimen models using written descriptions from pathology reports. Using 3D models of 10 head and neck surgical specimens, each participant relocated 20 mucosal margins (10 perpendicular, 10 shave). Results A total of 32 participants, 23 surgeons and 9 pathologists, marked 640 margins. Of the 320 marked perpendicular margins, 49.7% were greater than 1 centimeter from the true margin with a mean relocation error of 10.2 mm. Marked shave margins overlapped with the true margin a mean 54% of the time, with no overlap in 44 of 320 (13.8%) shave margins. Conclusions Surgical margin relocation is imprecise and challenging even for experienced surgeons and pathologists. New communication technologies are needed.
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Alexis Miller
University of Vermont
Vickie Wang
Yale University
Victor Jegede
Temple University
Head & Neck
Stanford University
Yale University
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
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Miller et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6b91fb6db643587639c05 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/hed.27793
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