Abstract
To investigate oncological, surgical and functional outcomes of transoral robotic surgery cordectomy (TORS-Co). A retrospective chart review of patients benefiting from TORS-Co for a cT1a vocal fold squamous cell carcinoma was conducted at a single academic medical center. TORS-Co was performed through da Vinci robot. The following outcomes were studied: preoperative and operative exposures; feasibility; conversion rate; average robotic set-up and operative times; margin status; postoperative complications; tracheotomy and feeding tube requirement. The medical record data of 12 patients were collected. Among them, two patients were excluded because the laryngeal exposition was not adequate. From the 10 included patients, TORS-Co was not performed in three patients. The tumor was not exposable regarding anatomical conditions in two patients, while the size of the robot arms did not allow an adequate exposure in another patient. TORS-Co was performed in the remaining seven patients without transient tracheotomy or feeding tube. The mean estimated blood loss was 20 mL. The average robotic set-up and operative times were 26 minutes and 30 minutes, respectively. The mean hospital stay was 2 days. The margins were not analyzable regarding the use of the monopolar. Two patients reported postoperative complications, while five required class 2 analgesics for postoperative pain. The mean duration of follow-up was 44 months (minimum duration of 36 months). One recurrence occurred 2 years post-surgery. The recurrence was successfully treated by transoral laser CO2 microsurgery. The exposure of the laryngeal surgical field is the primary limitation of TORS-Co. TORS-Co may not report better oncological and functional outcomes than transoral laser CO2 microsurgery, which remains the gold standard surgical approach for early glottic squamous cell carcinoma.
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