The long-term oncological and functional outcomes of transoral robotic surgery in patients with hypopharyngeal cancer
Hypopharyngeal cancer has the worst prognosis of all head-and-neck cancers. Despite the introduction of various new treatment modalities, the survival rate has not changed significantly over the past several decades [1 –3]. Moreover, radical surgery, such as laryngopharyngectomy with reconstruction of the pharynx, can reduce a patient’s quality of life after surgery, because it inevitably causes loss of normal speech and swallowing function [1,4–6]. Meanwhile, concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRTx), which is u sed as an organ preservation strategy, could preserve organ function with comparable oncologic results compared to conventional radical surgery [7–9].
Source: Oral Oncology - Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Young Min Park, Chan Min Jung, Dongchul Cha, Se-Heon Kim Source Type: research
More News: Cancer | Cancer & Oncology | Head and Neck Cancer | Hypopharyngeal Cancer | Oral Cancer | Pharyngeal Cancer