Pharyngocutaneous Fistula Following Total Laryngectomy: a High-Volume Tertiary Centre Series

AbstractPharyngocutaneous fistula is the leading complication following total laryngectomy. It delays complementary treatments, speech rehabilitation and oral feeding. Despite evolving medical care, fistula incidence remains high. There is no consensus regarding risk factors for fistula development. A standard score for fistula prediction is lacking. Study population included all patients submitted to total laryngectomy (with or without pharyngectomy) due to laryngeal or hypopharyngeal tumours, occurring between January 1st, 2012, and December 31st, 2016. Patient demographics were recorded as well as disease and treatment variables. Statistical analysis was performed using the IBM SPSS Statistics 25 ®. A previously described predictive model for fistula occurrence was applied. A total of 212 patients were included, the vast majority with advanced local disease (97.5%). Only 10% were submitted to rescue surgery. Fistula incidence was 39.9%. Our rates of locally advanced tumours, with extensive hypopharyngeal involvement, were higher than in most series. Age, tumour location, diabetes, previous chemoradiotherapy, advanced local and regional disease, extensive pharyngectomy, flap reconstruction, manual suture and low post-operative albumin level were associated to fistula occurrence on univ ariate analysis. Only salvage surgery and advanced local disease remained significant on multivariate analysis. An adapted Cecatto score correlated with fistula occurrence but has not achiev...
Source: Indian Journal of Surgical Oncology - Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research