"This is an interesting thought, but it’s still not considered standard of care," Dr. Marmur commented in describing the Utah research.
Session chair Dr. Allan C. Halpern, chief of the dermatology service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, said he and his colleagues, like the Utah group, are using a lot of topical imiquimod as adjunctive therapy for lentigo maligna.
"Because we’re a referral center, we see all those patients whose melanomas unfortunately do recur at the edge of large surgeries. We see a lot of patients whose local surgeons have chased around their faces for a certain amount of time. So I think the general concept of the cure rates of surgery is a bit overstated. I’m not trying to sell an off-label use of a drug, but I think sometimes imiquimod can be very helpful," Dr. Halpern said.
He offered a clinical pearl in diagnosing lentigo maligna: Consider a broad shave biopsy of a suspicious lesion rather than a deeper, smaller-diameter biopsy.
"Sampling errors are a real problem with lentigo maligna. We learned early on that if you take a large lentigo maligna and do multiple biopsies of the same lesion and send them to what we think are our very expert pathologists, on average, we get two or three back that were melanoma and two or three back that were pigmented actinic keratoses. The sampling error tends to be more in the horizontal than in the depth for these very early lesions," according to Dr. Halpern.
Dr. Marmur and Dr. Halpern reported having no relevant financial interests. SDEF and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.