Twenty patients with glottic squamous cell carcinoma and a fixed true vocal cord underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by supracricoid partial laryngectomy with cricohyoidoepiglottopexy. Phonation, respiration, and deglutition were preserved. Local control was better than has been previously reported for either extended vertical partial laryngectomy or radiation therapy. All patients were monitored for at least 3 years or until death. The Kaplan-Meier 3-year survival, local recurrence, nodal recurrence, distant metastasis, and second primary rates were 75%, 10.8%, 5%, 10.8%, and 10.8%, respectively. Overall local control was achieved in all cases, and laryngeal preservation in 90%. Our experience suggested that neoadjuvant chemotherapy with supracricoid partial laryngectomy with cricohyoidoepiglottopexy deserves further consideration in the treatment of glottic tumors with a fixed true vocal cord.
The 5-year survival rate for patients with hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma invading the upper esophagus is below 25% regardless of therapy. Most patients with advanced disease--unable to eat or breathe--die within 18 months of diagnosis. Because these patients, on average, have a limited time to live, surgical treatment should aim to maximize the quality of remaining life. Essential to this goal are complete tumor removal and rapid return to oral feeding. Furthermore, short hospital stay and low perioperative morbidity are especially important in these patients. We performed total laryngopharyngoesophagectomy (LPE) with gastric transposition in 34 patients with hypopharyngeal and cervical esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. There has been one perioperative death (3%) and 1 temporary fistula (3%). No major mediastinal or intrathoracic complication occurred. On average, patients began oral feeding by postoperative day 10, with return to a full diet and discharge home within 16 days, maximizing both quality and quantity of time remaining outside the hospital.
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