2009
DOI: 10.1002/lary.20225
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Does vocal cord fixation preclude nonsurgical management of laryngeal cancer?

Abstract: Nonsurgical therapy in patients with pretreatment vocal cord fixation is feasible. However, persistence of vocal cord fixation after definitive chemoradiotherapy is a poor prognostic sign and early surgical intervention should be considered. Laryngoscope, 2009.

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Cited by 23 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Baseline dysfunction, laryngeal or hypopharyngeal tumors, and T4 staging have been shown to portend unfavorable functional outcomes after organ preservation. [20][21][22] A majority of patients in this trial (64%) had T1 to T2 disease, few (9%) had laryngeal or hypopharyngeal tumors, and only 2 (4%) had MBS-evidence of baseline aspiration, explaining in part the satisfactory long-term functional outcomes we observed. Local therapy decisions likely also contributed to better than expected long-term functioning after the induction PCC regimen.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 75%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Baseline dysfunction, laryngeal or hypopharyngeal tumors, and T4 staging have been shown to portend unfavorable functional outcomes after organ preservation. [20][21][22] A majority of patients in this trial (64%) had T1 to T2 disease, few (9%) had laryngeal or hypopharyngeal tumors, and only 2 (4%) had MBS-evidence of baseline aspiration, explaining in part the satisfactory long-term functional outcomes we observed. Local therapy decisions likely also contributed to better than expected long-term functioning after the induction PCC regimen.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Functional outcomes are influenced by a number of patient, clinical, and treatment factors. Baseline dysfunction, laryngeal or hypopharyngeal tumors, and T4 staging have been shown to portend unfavorable functional outcomes after organ preservation . A majority of patients in this trial (64%) had T1 to T2 disease, few (9%) had laryngeal or hypopharyngeal tumors, and only 2 (4%) had MBS‐evidence of baseline aspiration, explaining in part the satisfactory long‐term functional outcomes we observed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, the patient retained appreciable vocal cord function of speech and deglutition, and his prognosis was good at two years after primary radiotherapy without tumor recurrence. The return of vocal cord function after chemoradiotherapy is a useful prognostic factor, with a five-year overall survival rate in patients with recovered vocal cord function of 100%, compared with a two-year overall survival rate of patients with vocal cord fixation of less than 40% [13]. Our patient recovered vocal cord fixation, with no obvious signs of tumor recurrence more than two years after initial chemoradiotherapy.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Several recently published reports corroborate the poorer prognosis associated with the posterior spread of glottic carcinoma. TCAS involvement is a negative prognostic factor for intermediate-advanced glottic carcinomas in terms of locoregional control rates after both surgical and nonsurgical treatments 5,7,11,12 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%