Free Tissue Transfer to Manage Salvage Laryngectomy Defects After Organ Preservation Failure
Adult
Aged, 80 and over
Male
Salvage Therapy
Laryngectomy
Middle Aged
Plastic Surgery Procedures
Combined Modality Therapy
Surgical Flaps
3. Good health
03 medical and health sciences
Postoperative Complications
Treatment Outcome
0302 clinical medicine
Case-Control Studies
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
Humans
Female
Laryngeal Neoplasms
Aged
Retrospective Studies
DOI:
10.1097/mlg.0b013e3180332e39
Publication Date:
2007-04-18T08:04:08Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
AbstractObjective: Salvage laryngectomy to treat organ preservation failures results in significantly higher local wound complications. Even in the absence of extralaryngeal disease, primary closure of laryngeal defects can result in protracted wound care problems. We hypothesize that even when sufficient mucosa is present to close the defect primarily, introduction of vascularized tissue to close the defect may improve outcomes.Design: Retrospective case‐control study.Setting: Two academic tertiary care centers.Patients and Methods: Patients undergoing salvage surgery for laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma between 2000 to 2006 were considered for this study. Patients requiring total laryngopharyngectomy or partial pharyngectomy were excluded. There were 37 patients who met study criteria: 17 patients underwent free flap reconstruction (16 radial forearm flaps and 1 rectus flap), and 20 patients underwent primary closure. The median follow‐up was 12 (range, 4–60) months. Previous treatment consisted of chemoradiation for 41% of the reconstruction group and 35% of the primary closure group; the remainder were treated with primary radiation alone.Main Outcome Measures: Pharyngocutaneous fistula, stricture, length of hospitalization, feeding tube dependence.Results: The free flap reconstruction group had a lower rate of fistula (18%) compared with the primary closure group (50%). A lower rate of stricture formation (18% vs. 25%) and feeding tube dependence (23% vs. 45%) was observed in the free flap reconstruction group compared with the primary closure group. The development of a fistula in either group resulted in a prolonged hospital stay (mean, 19 vs. 7 days) and additional procedures.Conclusion: Planned reconstruction of salvage laryngectomy defects with vascularized tissue is associated with a lower fistula rate and may improve outcomes.
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