Hiding in Plain Sight: A Retrospective Review of Unrecognized Tumors During Dermatologic Surgery

Cureus. 2022 Mar 25;14(3):e23487. doi: 10.7759/cureus.23487. eCollection 2022 Mar.

Abstract

Background: Mohs micrographic surgery requires focused attention that may lead to tunnel vision bias, contributing to not recognizing skin cancer at nearby sites.

Objective: It is to determine if a subsequently diagnosed skin cancer was visible at the time of Mohs surgery.

Methods: A retrospective chart review was performed at a single academic center from 2008 to 2020. Patients who underwent at least two distinct MMS procedures, separated in time to capture subsequent tumors, were included.

Results: Four hundred and four individual patients were identified with at least two distinct Mohs procedures, which generated 1,110 Mohs sequences. Fifty-one (4.6%) clinically apparent tumors went unrecognized and 127 (11.4%) tumors were identified and biopsied during the visit. High-risk tumor histology was identified in 10 (20%) unrecognized tumors and 31 (24%) recognized tumors (p-value 0.491).

Conclusion: Our study suggests that Mohs surgeons may be overlooking adjacent skin cancers when focusing only on the tumor being surgically treated. Tunnel vision bias may account for part of this phenomenon.

Keywords: cognitive bias; decision making process; dermatology and dermatologic surgery; heuristic decision; quality improvement and patient safety.