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. 2020 Jul 15;12(7):e9211. doi: 10.7759/cureus.9211

Table 1. Data from the studies with the title and conclusion .

Author and year of publication Type of study No. of patients Purpose of the study Result/conclusion
 Ito et al., 2015 [11] Observational study 218 Narrow excision margin is a reliable method for excision of well-demarcated, primary pigmented basal cell carcinoma Surgical removal with a 2-3-mm excision margin is an adequate treatment for well-defined, primary pigmented BCC, with a 99% complete removal rate.
Lin et al., 2016 [12 Retrospective study 143 Treatment of pigmented basal cell carcinoma with 3 mm surgical margin in asians The study suggests that a 3mm margin is reliable for the excision of pigmented BCC. Nonpigmented BCC had a higher risk for recurrence and thus needs careful follow up.
Ünverdi et al., 2020 [13]   Observational study   113 Recommended surgical margins for basal cell carcinoma Is 3 mm safe enough?   A 3-mm surgical margin is sufficient for BCC excision.
Thomas et al., 2003 [14 Prospective study 150 Excision margins for non-melanotic skin cancer (NMSCS) The majority of NMSC of up to 20 mm in diameter should be excised with a 4-mm surgical margin of skin that appears clinically healthy under magnification
Laloo et al., 2000 [15] Prospective study 63 Head and neck basal cell carcinoma: treatment with a 2‐mm clinical excision margin   clinical excision margin of 2mm is adequate for the treatment of simple, well defined  BCCs arising in the head and neck
Konopnicki et al., 2016 [16 Retrospective study 127 Nasal basal cell carcinomas. Can we decrease surgical margins to 3 mm with a complete rate of excision? Three-millimeters margins could be used to manage nasal BCC in selected cases.
Chadha et al., 2009 [17 Retrospective study 90 Small margin excision of periocular basal cell carcinomas. British Journal of Ophthalmology, Histological clearance rates and recurrence rates  are not  compromised by using smaller (2 mm) than conventional margins for clinically well-defined nodular BCCs
Huang et al., 2004 [18 Prospective study 55 Small margin excision of periocular basal cell carcinoma A small margin of excision of nodular adnexal BCCs with a delayed repair is a safe and efficient method.
Santiago et al., 2019 [19 observational study 306 How wide should he excision margins for facial small aggressive basal cell carcinoma be? Experience with 306 Cases.    In small facial primary BCCs with aggressive histological patterns a 4 mm resection margin was enough to eradicate the lesion completely in 99% of cases
Nazhad et al., 2006 [20 Prospective study 50 Safety margin in excision of basal cell carcinoma.   Excision margin of 4 mm is enough
Nemet et al., 2006 [21 Retrospective study 485 Management of periocular basal and squamous cell carcinoma: A Series of 485 cases Two-millimeter margins is adequate in preventing recurrences for nodular BCCs, and 4 mm for preventing recurrence in other types of BCC.
Wolf et al., 1987 [22 Observational study 117 Surgical margins for basal cell carcinoma It concluded that a minimum margin of 4 mm excision margin is  necessary to eradicate a tumor in 95% of BCCs measuring less than 2 cm
Griffiths et al., 1999 [23 Prospective study 1392 Audit of histologically incompletely excised basal cell carcinomas: recommendations for management by re-excision. The incomplete excision in the histological report in basal cell carcinomas excised with a 3mm margin,  was found in 7%of the lesions
Blomqvist et al., 1982 [24 Observational study 477 Surgical results in 477 basal cell carcinomas. The study concluded that 3mm margins eradicated the tumor in only 85% of cases
Kimyai-Asadi et al., 2005 [25 Observational study 134 Efficacy of narrow-margin excision  of well-demarcated primary facial basal cell carcinomas  Narrow excision margin of 1-3 mm is not enough for the removal, of well-defined, primary nodular BCCs of the face.