Abstract

Transoral robotic surgery (TORS) is an innovative surgical technique indicated for resection of selected head and neck cancers. The authors report their experience and discuss the indications, advantages and disadvantages of this technique. Seventeen patients were operated by TORS in the Limoges University Hospital ENT department between March 2010 and January 2011. Tumour sites were the aryepiglottic fold (n=3), piriform sinus (n=2), lateral pharyngeal wall (n=3), posterior pharyngeal wall (n=2), base of tongue (n=3), vallecula (n=1), epiglottis (n=2) and arytenoid (n=2). One patient had two primary sites treated by TORS. This series comprised two stage I (11.7%), seven stage II (41.2%), six stage III (35.4%) and two stage IVa tumours (11.7%). Mean TORS set-up and operating times were 20.5 and 39.7 minutes, respectively. No major intraoperative complication was observed. One patient was reoperated on D5 for bleeding. Fifteen patients had clear surgical margins. Swallowing was restored on D2 for nine patients. The mean length of hospital stay was 10 days. Seven patients received adjuvant radiotherapy, seven patients were treated by chemoradiotherapy and three patients were submitted to simple clinical surveillance. TORS appears to provide new treatment options for head and neck cancers by extending the indications for endoscopic resection for selected cases of head and neck cancers. It allows effective cancer resection under excellent operating conditions with low morbidity and improved functional recovery. This new treatment modality needs to be evaluated in relation to other open surgery, endoscopic laser and chemoradiotherapy techniques.

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