2 research outputs found

    Salvage surgery after radiotherapy for laryngeal cancer : From endoscopic resections to open-neck partial and total laryngectomies

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    Objective: To evaluate our experience in management of radiotherapy failure using endoscopic resection (ER) with carbon dioxide laser, open-neck partial laryngectomy (ONPL), and total laryngectomy. Design: Retrospective medical record review. Setting: Referral university hospital. Patients: Seventy-one patients with laryngeal cancer previously treated with radiotherapy (69 patients) and chemoradiotherapy (2 patients) underwent salvage surgery. Interventions: The treatment policy encompassed ER for glottic rT1a, rT1b with limited anterior commissure involvement, and rT2 with normal cord mobility carcinoma. All ONPLs were performed for rT1 and rT2 tumors with suboptimal endoscopic exposure, rT2 tumors with impaired cord mobility or transcommissural extension, and rT3 tumors for limited paraglottic space invasion or involvement of the inner portion of the thyroid cartilage. Total laryngectomy was planned in patients who were not suitable for partial laryngectomy owing to poor general condition, for rT3 carcinoma with massive involvement of the paraglottic space, and for rT4a tumors. Main Outcome Measures: Clinical, radiologic, surgical, and pathologic data. Survival curves were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Comparisons between different variables were performed using the log-rank test. Results: Salvage surgery consisted of ER in 22 patients, ONPL in 15, and total laryngectomy in 34. The pT category after salvage surgery was pT1 in 12 patients, pT2 in 20, pT3 in 20, and pT4a in 19. Five-year diseasespecific and disease-free survival and laryngeal preservation for the entire series were 72%, 61%, and 40%, respectively. Conclusions: Survival rates for the entire series were not different from those previously reported using a more aggressive surgical approach without attempts at organ preservation. The laryngeal preservation rate justifies conservative treatment in the presence of limited recurrent lesions

    Internal jugular vein patency after lateral neck dissection: a prospective study

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    In spite of anatomical preservation of the internal jugular vein (IJV), an occlusion rate of the vessel of up to 30% has been documented after selective or modified radical neck dissections. The aim of the present prospective study was to evaluate the patency of the IJV following selective lateral neck dissection (LND) in 34 patients affected by squamous cell carcinoma of the upper aerodigestive tract who underwent surgery concomitantly on the primary site and the neck. Eighteen patients received unilateral and 16 bilateral LND, for a total of 50 IJVs. Postoperative radiotherapy on the neck was delivered in four patients with histologic evidence of micro-extracapsular spread; the impact of this variable on IJV patency was assessed by the Fisher test. A preoperative baseline study of vein patency and flow by ultrasonography (US) was obtained. Postoperative controls were scheduled at 1 week, 1 month and 3 months following surgery. No patient developed either wound infection or a pharyngocutaneous fistula, and no signs or symptoms of IJV occlusion were observed during the postoperative course. At the first US control, 25 IJVs (50%) did not present any alteration in patency, and 23 (46%) and 2 (4%) had a reduced or absent flow, respectively. At the second and third controls, 33 (66%) and 45 (90%) of the IJVs presented with normal flow, respectively. At the end of the study, none of the patients showed evidence of occlusion. Postoperative radiotherapy did not have a statistically significant impact on IJV patency ( P=0.09). In conclusion, long-term IJV occlusion after LND has to be considered an exceedingly rare event with negligible morbidity. However, alterations of IJV flow frequently occur in the immediate postoperative course
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