Clinical outcome of salvage neck dissections in head and neck cancer in relation to initial treatment, extent of surgery, and patient factors.
Clin Otolaryngol. 2016 Dec 29;:
Authors: van den Bovenkamp K, Noordhuis MG, Oosting SF, van der Laan BF, Roodenburg JL, Bijl HP, Halmos GB, Plaat BE
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Salvage surgery has a higher complication rate compared to primary surgical treatment. We evaluated clinical outcome of salvage neck dissections in relation to initial treatment modality, extent of surgery, and patient related factors.
DESIGN: Single institution consecutive case series.
SETTING: Tertiary Head and Neck Cancer Center.
PARTICIPANTS: Eighty-seven patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, who underwent salvage neck dissection after initial radiotherapy (n=30), radiotherapy with carboplatin/5-fluorouracil (n=43), or radiotherapy with cetuximab (n=14).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Incidence of complications, disease-specific survival.
RESULTS: Complications occurred in 28% of the patients. Multivariate analysis identified extent of neck dissection as the only independent predictor of surgical complications (p = .010). Surgical complication rate was 16% after radiotherapy with systemic treatment, and 47% after radiotherapy alone (p = .171). The 5-year disease-specific survival was 55%, independent of complications, initial treatment, extent of surgery, and patient related factors.
CONCLUSION: The only predictor for surgical complications was extent of surgery. Survival was not influenced by complications. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
PMID: 28032952 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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