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Treatment outcome in patients undergoing surgery for carcinoma larynx and hypopharynx – a follow-up study

50

Citations

9

References

2009

Year

Abstract

Of a total of 167 cases, 123 (74%) had salvage surgery for failed chemoradiotherapy/radical radiotherapy and 44 (26%) had primary surgical treatment. Conservation surgery was undertaken in 4 cases, near total laryngectomy or pharyngectomy (NTL/NTLP) was done in 14 and total laryngectomy (TLPE) with gastric pull up was done in 5. Total laryngectomy (TL) or TL with partial or subtotal pharyngectomy was done in 144 cases. Concomitant neck dissection (ND) was done in 46 cases, 14 posterolateral selective, 15 radical neck dissections (RNDs), 2 extended RNDs, 12 bilateral NDs and 3 modified neck dissections (MNDs). Five patients received platinum-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy and nine had postoperative chemotherapy. In 116 patients the pharyngeal remnant was closed primarily, 21 patients had pectoralis major myocutaneous flap patch reconstruction, 18 had tubed pectoralis major myocutaneous (PMMC) flap reconstruction, 4 had folded (bipaddled) PMMC flap reconstruction, 7 had PMMC and 3 patients had deltopectoral (DP) flap for skin cover. Pathological margin positivity was seen in seven cases and perinodal disease was seen in nine. There was a statistically significant survival difference between salvage and primary surgical cases among cancers of the larynx and hypopharynx. Hypopharyngeal salvage rate was significantly lower in the present study. Sixty-two (37%) patients had postoperative leaks. Five leaks persisted to form pharyngocutaneous fistulae. All of these patients had either wound infection with or without flap necrosis or previous radiation. Two were repaired and in two cases speech prosthesis insertion was possible due its anatomical position. One patient refused further surgical closure after a partially failed repair. Fifty-six (34%) patients recurred locoregionally, 4 (2.3%) patients developed a second primary and 5 (2.9%) had distant metastasis. Thirty patients were voice rehabilitated with an electronic larynx. Seventeen patients had voice prosthesis insertion (6 primary and 10 secondary), 3 patients developed good oesophageal speech and voice preservation was possible in 18 patients. Seventy-nine patients were alive at the time of completing the study.

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