Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is a leading cause of cancer-related death in developing countries. The oral tongue is the most common site involved by OSCC. About a third of the patients have neck nodal metastasis at presentation. Reconstruction of the oral tongue after resection for cancer is necessary for proper rehabilitation. For patients who are medically unfit for prolonged surgery like a free tissue transfer, local flaps are employed for tongue reconstruction. The submental flap is a popular option. However, when there is extensive floor of mouth involvement or bulky nodal disease in ipsilateral level 1, harvesting the submental flap based on contralateral facial vessels is possible, without compromising oncological safety. We discuss the feasibility and outcomes of contralateral submental artery island flap for reconstruction after resection of oral tongue carcinoma in a retrospective series of 34 patients followed up for a median of 8.5 months. ResultsOf the 34 oral tongue cancer patients in the study, 16 had neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery. 33 underwent bilateral neck dissection. Two patients had partial flap loss which was managed conservatively. There were five patients who had either locoregional or distant recurrence, none in the flap site. Three had pathological positive nodes at contralateral level 1b and two had pathologically positive nodes in contralateral level 1b. Tongue motility and speech intelligibility were satisfactory on follow-up. ConclusionIn the properly selected patient, the contralateral submental artery island flap offers an oncologically safe and technically simpler alternative for free flap reconstruction.
Read full abstract