Advanced Skin Cancer Treatment

The Gold Standard for Skin Cancer Care

What is Mohs Surgery?

Mohs surgery, also known as Mohs micrographic surgery is an advanced, highly precise technique for treating certain types of skin cancer. First developed in the 1930s by Dr. Frederic Mohs, this method allows your surgeon to remove cancerous tissue layer by layer while examining each layer under the microscope in real time. This ensures that all cancer cells are removed while preserving as much healthy skin as possible.

Why Mohs Surgery Is Recommended?

Mohs surgery offers the highest cure rate of any skin cancer treatment, with success rates up to 99% for many tumors. It is considered the gold standard for:

  • Cancers on cosmetically sensitive areas (face, scalp, ears, nose, lips, hands, feet, or genital area).
  • Skin cancers that have recurred after previous treatment

  • Large or poorly defined cancers

  • Areas where preserving healthy tissue is especially important

Because the surgeon examines the entire margin of the removed tissue, Mohs surgery minimizes the chance of the cancer coming back while reducing unnecessary removal of normal skin.

How Mohs Surgery Works

The procedure is performed in several steps:

  1. Local anesthesia is used to numb the area.

  2. The surgeon removes the visible portion of the cancer.

  3. A thin layer of surrounding tissue is removed and processed in an on-site lab.

  4. The surgeon examines the tissue under a microscope to check for remaining cancer cells.

  5. If cancer is still present, another layer is removed only from the area where it remains.

  6. This process is repeated until the margins are completely clear.

Once the cancer is fully removed, the wound is repaired, sometimes with stitches, sometimes with a flap or graft, or in select cases, allowed to heal naturally.

Close-up of surgeons operating in a hospital theater setting with precision.

Benefits of Mohs Surgery

Highest cure rate available

Mohs surgery offers cure rates up to 99%, making it the most effective treatment for many types of skin cancer.

Minimal removal of healthy skin

Only tissue containing cancer cells is removed, allowing you to keep as much normal, healthy skin as possible.

Immediate confirmation that all cancer has been removed

Each layer is examined under a microscope during the procedure, ensuring the cancer is fully cleared before the wound is repaired.

Smaller scars and optimized cosmetic outcome

By preserving more healthy skin, Mohs surgery leads to smaller wounds, better healing, and more natural-looking results.

Especially effective for complex or high-risk cancers

Mohs is ideal for cancers in delicate areas, recurrent tumors, or those with aggressive or unclear borders.

What to Expect During the Procedure

  • Arrive early: Plan to arrive about 15 minutes before your appointment.

  • Eat normally: Have breakfast and take your usual medications unless advised otherwise.

  • Plan for time: The procedure can take several hours, as tissue is examined between stages.

  • Comfort: Local anesthesia keeps you comfortable throughout.

  • Healing: Once all cancer cells are removed, your surgeon will discuss the best closure option for your wound.

A dermatologist conducts a skin treatment on a patient in a modern clinic setting.
Surgeons focusing on a procedure in an equipped operating room, showcasing teamwork and precision.

Who performs mohs surgery?

A Mohs surgeon is a board-certified dermatologist with additional 1–2 years of fellowship training in:

  • Skin cancer surgery

  • Dermatopathology (microscopic tissue analysis)

  • Advanced reconstruction and plastic surgery techniques

These surgeons are specially trained to both remove the cancer and reconstruct the wound for the best functional and cosmetic results.

Close-up of a dental professional's hands with tools and gloves in a clinic setting.

Is Mohs Surgery Right for You?

Your dermatologist may recommend Mohs surgery if your cancer is:

  • On a cosmetically or functionally important area

  • Recurrent

  • Aggressive or large

  • Ill-defined at the edges

Mohs provides the best balance of complete cancer removal and cosmetic preservation.