Primary surgical treatment is associated with improved survival for patients with stage IV disease and specifically T4 primary tumors. These data suggest that the observed national decrease in survival from laryngeal cancer may be due to a shift toward nonoperative treatment in that subset of patients with advanced primary disease.
Acute laryngeal trauma is a rare injury. In the past 18 years, 77 patients with acute laryngeal trauma have been evaluated at our institution. Each patient's care was overseen by the senior author (E.S.P.). The 61 patients who were seen within 48 hours of their accident are compared with those treated after 48 hours. All patients are classified by both injury (groups 1 through 5) and treatment (types I through III). Results are reported for voice, airway, and swallowing. Our methods of evaluation and treatment are outlined, and controversial aspects of patient management are addressed. We conclude that conservative treatment of group 1 and 2 injuries is 100% effective, expeditious repair of laryngeal injuries greatly reduces poor outcome, and the type of injury can be used to roughly predict patient outcome. Further, with use of current methods of diagnosis and management, almost all patients will be decannulated (98%) with functional speech (100%) and normal deglutition (100%).
The push PEG technique appears to have a significantly lower risk of complications compared with the pull technique in patients with advanced head and neck cancer. The authors recommend considering the use of the push method when PEG placement is required.
This study reports the results of cisplatin (CDDP)-based chemotherapy (CT) as sole therapy and as neoadjuvant (NA) therapy in 28 consecutive patients (pts) with advanced basal cell (BC) and squamous cell (SC) cancers of the skin. CT in 24 pts consisted of CDDP 75 mgm/m2 and doxorubicin (Dox) 50 mg/m2 intravenously (IV) every 3 weeks with Dox being omitted in four pts due to severe preexisting cardiac disease. Thirteen of the 28 pts received CT in the NA setting, five before surgery and eight before radiation therapy (RT). Response rates to CT were complete remission (CR) in eight of 28 (28%) pts, partial remission (PR) in 11 of 28 (40%) for an overall response rate of 68%. Thirteen pts received a second treatment modality with five of 13 pts having a CR to CT alone before the second modality and seven converting to CR postsecond modality for a total CR rate of 12 of 13 (92%) in the multimodality group. Duration of responses in the CT-only group ranged from 4 to 82 months; however, only two patients remain in remission in this group. Of the twelve CRs from the multimodality therapy group, 11 of 12 (91%) pts remain in CR with duration of response ranging from 3 to 81 months. Toxicities were manageable, with no toxic deaths and only five pts stopped CT secondary to side effects. This study suggests the combination of CDDP and Dox is highly effective in BC and SC cancers of the skin and by itself can produce long unmaintained remissions, but when combined with a second modality of therapy, it is capable of producing not only long unmaintained CRs but probable cures in the majority of pts.
The purpose of this report is to promote early recognition, expeditious evaluation, and judicious management of acute external laryngeal trauma. A retrospective chart review was performed of 112 cases that were managed at a Medical College of Georgia tertiary care hospital by the senior author (E.S.P.). Patients were classified by the time of their presentation, the severity of their injury, and the treatment protocol followed. The clinical outcomes of airway, voice quality, and deglutition were retrospectively reviewed. For voice outcomes, in the delayed treatment group, only 27.7% of patients had a good result, as compared to a 78.3% good result in the early treatment group. Similar differences were demonstrated regarding the airway. In the delayed treatment group, only 73.3% had good airway function, as compared to 93.3% who had good airway function in the early treatment group. Ninety-nine percent of all patients had a good result for deglutition. We conclude that expeditious diagnosis and intervention reduce the incidence of suboptimal clinical outcomes, and with timely and appropriate application of diagnostic and management protocols, the majority of patients will be successfully decannulated (97%) with functional speech (100%) and normal deglutition (99%).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.