Abstract

Concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) is increasingly used in organ preservation for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), with surgery as second-line treatment for salvaging locoregional failure. The significance of post-CCRT salvage surgery, however, remains to be established. We report complications and clinical outcome in 34 salvage surgeries on 30 subjects with advanced HNSCC treated by docetaxel and cisplatin concurrent with conventional radiotherapy. Postoperative complications occurred in 9 (30%) subjects and 10 (29%) surgeries. There was no significant difference in complication incidence between salvage surgeries for persistent disease (7 of 19 cases, 37%) and those for recurrent disease (3 of 15 cases, 20%). Complication incidence in isolated neck dissection (6 of 21 cases, 29%) did not differ significantly from that in primary site resection (4 of 13 cases, 31%). Most frequent complications were dysphagia and skin flap necrosis, occurring in 5 subjects each. Three with dysphagia underwent percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy, and two with skin flap necrosis led to pharyngocutaneous fistula, requiring pectoralis major myocutaneous flap repair. No carotid artery rupture or chyle fistula occurred. Overall 3-year survival after salvage surgery was 74% for persistent disease, and 87% for recurrent disease. Although post-CCRT salvage surgery harbors high risk of complication, it renders good survival and is recommendable for all whose disease is operable.

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