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Nova Scotia

Skin cancer patients to benefit from 'gold standard' surgery coming to N.S.

As with any cancer, but especially on the face, getting rid of it as soon as possible is important. But the best surgical procedure for basal and squamous cell carcinomas has been unavailable in Nova Scotia. That's changing.

Conventional surgery removes extra skin from face, but there's still chance cancer was missed

Mel Briand has scarring on her face after conventional surgery that hasn't been able to keep skin cancer at bay. (Mel Briand/Robert Short/CBC)

Mel Briand's face bears the evidence of how she used to spend her summers.

Sun damage has required her to have cancer surgery on her face. She has scarsabove her lip and on her nosefrom surgeries to cut away basal cell carcinoma.

If it comes back, it threatens to burrow into her bones.

At 64, the Halifax woman has been fighting the disease for a nearly a decade, and with each recurrence and subsequent surgery there's the risk of disfigurement.

She wishes her treatment could be different. Changes are on the horizon in Nova Scotia that will make that happen.

Briand's cancer is the result of being part of ageneration of sun worshippers who slathered on baby oil to "bake yourself and burn" under the sun.

"We damaged our skin terriblyand as you get older [cancer] starts to come out," she said while sitting under the shade in her backyardlast week.

Mel Briand, on the left, was part of the generation that used baby oil for tanning. (Mel Briand)

Her nostril is still healing after surgery earlier this month to dig out a chunk of cancerous skin. There's also a scar along her ear from where skin was removed to create a graft to close the wound on her nose.

She underwent basicsurgery that removes a larger pieceof tissue with the hope that it removesall the cancer.

Lab results usually take about a month to determine whether any cancer was visible along the tissue's edges. But the removal and detection are imprecise.

This is the second treatment to that same spot on Briand'snose, where skin is already thin. Each recurrence gets closer to the bone.

"I worry about, will I notice if something starts up again that doesn't feel normal to me now."

Briand has had skin cancer appear in this spot twice. She's photographed two weeks after surgery. (Robert Short/CBC)

What rubs salt in her wound is that there's a specialized treatment that's standard care in many provinces, including New Brunswick.

Mohs surgery has been offered in Saint John since 2006, and ata newclinic in Monctonopened in February.But it's not available inNova Scotia, even though her dermatologist has the necessary training.

The micrographic surgery uses a microscope to detect cancer during thesurgical appointment. There's no waiting for weeks to determine whether all the cancer has been removed.

In the Mohs method, the dermatologist cuts away the cancerous tissue, creates a tumour mapand divides the tissue into sections.

It'sthen shaved into thin layersand stained with a dye so the cancer shows up under a microscope. Layers of tissue continue to cut away until it's clear of cancer. A patient leaves the appointment knowing the cancer has been removed.

Its precisionmeans the smallest amount of healthy tissue is removed. It eliminates the need to wait weeks for labresults to indicate whether the additional surgery is needed.

With a high cure rate, it's a cost-saverto the health-care system.

'We need it, just get it done'

There's no reliable data available on the rate of basal and squamous cell skin cancers in Nova Scotia, according to the Canadian Cancer Society.

But it's known that the provincehas among the highest rates of melanoma skin cancers in the country, which have similar risk factors, so therates of skin carcinomas are also likely high, said the organization.

Despite the high incidence, Mohs surgery is not well known in Nova Scotia. Briand has spoken to skin cancer patientswho are unaware of the procedure.

"We need it, just get it done," Briand said, about her recent letter to the health minister, pushing for a Mohs clinic in Nova Scotia.

Briand says the surgical scars above her lip and on her nose are reminders to apply sunblock. (Robert Short/CBC)

The topic is timely.

Dr. Robert Strang, Nova Scotia's chief medical officer of health, travelled to New Brunswick two weeks ago for the treatment. He was absent from his regular COVID-19 briefings because of the mandatory 14-day isolation period after a trip out of the province.

On June 10, Strang said his cancer had been removed but he needed "another type of surgery that can relook at things and make sure the margins of where it was removed are clear."

He's not the only Nova Scotian who's travelled across the border for the treatment. A spokesperson for the Department of Health said in an email about 40 Nova Scotians were referred to New Brunswick for Mohs surgery in 2017-2018.

Mohs surgery has been approved

That trip maysoon be unnecessary.

Mohs surgery was approved last fall, according to a spokesperson for the Department of Health, and since then work has begun to get the province's first micrographic surgery clinic off the ground.

It's estimated thatabout 1,000 Nova Scotiansa year will benefit from the treatment.

The Nova Scotia Health Authority said in a statement a billing code was created earlier this year, and it's working on an operational plan, which includesequipment and resources.

It's the result ofa campaign by the medical community, led by Dr. Michael Stevens, Briand's dermatologist.

He's been paving the way to bring this service to Nova Scotia, his home province.

Dr. Michael Stevens set up his practice in Bedford, N.S., with the hope it might become a Mohs surgical clinic. (Elizabeth Chiu/CBC)

Stevensgot his first introduction to Mohs surgery while he was a Dalhousie University medical student on a rotation in Saint John.

He then pursued a dermatology residency at University of Torontoand stayed an extra year to complete training in Mohs surgery in 2018.

'It's been a long time coming'

While in Toronto, Stevens gathered the support of Nova Scotia's top doctors in dermatology, plastic surgeryand related specialities to lobby the Health Department to develop the service, which included overcoming hurdles such as creating a new billing code.

But part of the reason why Nova Scotia hasn't had a clinic is because there are only about 20 Mohs surgeons in the countryand only one or two are trained each year, he said.

The technique, which canpinpointthe cancerous cell to within a millimetre, is "universally accepted as the gold standard" for treating basal and squamous cell carcinomas,he said.

The cancers are so common, Stevens said hecould perform Mohs surgeryfive days a week at his clinic in Bedford.

"If we can get this up and running, I'll be ecstatic for my patients," he said. "It's been a long time coming."

He would need equipment, a nurse and a technician in order to get started.

For Briand's recurring cancer, time is of the essence.

When the cancer's return was confirmed in January, she was advised by Stevens not to join New Brunswick's wait list, which he told her stretched for nine months and included about 250 names.

That wait grew by an additional three to five months because of COVID-19, according to Dr. Martin LeBlanc, who works out of a state-of-the-art clinic in Moncton.

While most of thepatients are New Brunswickers, about 10 per cent are from Nova Scotia and P.E.I.

More out-of-province patients would be treated if access was easier, said LeBlanc.

Briand opted for the conventional surgery, but that too was postponed because of the pandemic. Ithappened earlier this month.

"Nobody likes scars on their face," she said. "The more we can minimize people's face's being cut, the better."

She's frustrated that skin cancer patients in Nova Scotia are going without the best care.

"That kind of thing bothers me a lot, that's an injustice to me," she said.