Hidradenitis suppurativa needs surgery when medical treatment fails to control the disease, when extensive scarring and sinus tracts develop, or when recurrent abscesses keep returning to the same areas. Surgery isn’t first-line. It enters the plan once the condition reaches a stage where conservative care can’t keep up with the damage. The decision rests on two things. How advanced the disease is. And how much scarring and tunnelling has already formed.
According to Dr. Leena Jain, best plastic surgeon in Borivali, Once sinus tracts and dense scarring have formed, no amount of medication will reverse them, so surgery becomes the only way to remove the damaged tissue and give the skin a chance to heal.
What Signs Indicate Surgery for Hidradenitis Suppurativa?
Surgery becomes appropriate when specific features signal that medical management alone won’t control the disease. These are the main signs.
Recurrent abscesses: Lumps that keep returning to the same area, often draining and re-forming over months, point to tissue damage that won’t settle without surgical removal.
Sinus tract formation: Tunnels develop under the skin connecting affected areas. These don’t close with medication, and they tend to grow longer and more complex over time.
Why scarring matters?: Dense fibrous scarring distorts skin, restricts movement, and creates pockets where infection lingers. Once established, only excision restores healthy tissue.
Stage III disease: Advanced cases with widespread sinus tracts, abscesses, and scarring across an entire region usually need wide surgical excision rather than further antibiotics or biologics.
Mild cases respond to medication. Many do. But when the disease keeps escalating despite treatment, surgery becomes the only option that addresses the structural damage rather than the symptoms.
For complex reconstructive needs after wide excision, this connects with plastic surgery and trauma care.
What Surgical Options Are Used for Hidradenitis Suppurativa?
Surgery for hidradenitis suppurativa ranges from limited drainage to wide excision with reconstruction. These are the main techniques.
Incision and drainage: Used for acute abscesses to relieve pain quickly, though it doesn’t prevent recurrence. Recurrence rates remain high without further treatment.
Local excision: Removal of the affected area with a margin of healthy skin. Suits isolated lesions but recurrence at the edges remains a risk.
Wide local excision?: Removal of all affected tissue down to fascia in an entire region, which is the most effective at preventing recurrence in that specific area.
Reconstruction: After wide excision, the resulting wound often needs flap reconstruction, skin grafting, or healing by secondary intention, depending on size and location.
Excision is the only intervention that consistently prevents recurrence in a treated area. Reconstruction restores function and appearance afterward. So the decision isn’t surgery or no surgery, but how wide the excision needs to be and how the wound will be closed.
For another example of chronic wound management, read sternal wound infection.
Why Choose Dr. Leena Jain?
Dr. Leena Jain is a Plastic, Reconstructive and Microsurgeon. MCh in Plastic Surgery. Fellowship in Microsurgery and Perforator Flaps, Hanyang University, Seoul. Over 7+ years across reconstructive work for chronic skin and wound conditions.
Patients with advanced hidradenitis suppurativa have had affected areas cleared and reconstructed under her care, with attention to scar placement and functional recovery. Each plan balances thorough disease removal against the impact of wide excision. Definitive, not partial.
Living with painful recurrent lumps that keep coming back despite treatment?
FAQs
Is hidradenitis suppurativa curable with surgery?
Surgery can eliminate disease in a treated area, but recurrence elsewhere remains possible.
What stage of HS needs surgery?
Usually Stage II or III with sinus tracts, scarring, or persistent abscesses.
Can mild hidradenitis suppurativa be treated without surgery?
Yes, early cases often respond to medical therapy and lifestyle measures.
Does surgery leave scars?
Yes, but careful reconstruction minimises scar impact and restores function.
