Recommendations for postoperative radiotherapy in head & neck squamous cell carcinoma in the presence of flaps: A GORTEC internationally-reviewed HNCIG-endorsed consensus.

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_F8E301B5142A
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Recommendations for postoperative radiotherapy in head & neck squamous cell carcinoma in the presence of flaps: A GORTEC internationally-reviewed HNCIG-endorsed consensus.
Périodique
Radiotherapy and oncology
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Carsuzaa F., Lapeyre M., Gregoire V., Maingon P., Beddok A., Marcy P.Y., Salleron J., Coutte A., Racadot S., Pointreau Y., Graff P., Beadle B., Benezery K., Biau J., Calugaru V., Castelli J., Chua M., Di Rito A., Dore M., Ghadjar P., Huguet F., Jardel P., Johansen J., Kimple R., Krengli M., Laskar S., Mcdowell L., Nichols A., Tribius S., Valduvieco I., Hu C., Liem X., Moya-Plana A., D'onofrio I., Parvathaneni U., Takiar V., Orlandi E., Psyrri A., Shenouda G., Sher D., Steuer C., Shan Sun X., Tao Y., Thomson D., Tsai M.H., Vulquin N., Gorphe P., Mehanna H., Yom S.S., Bourhis J., Thariat J.
ISSN
1879-0887 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0167-8140
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
07/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
160
Pages
140-147
Langue
anglais
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Résumé
Head and neck reconstructive surgery using a flap is increasingly common. Best practices and outcomes for postoperative radiotherapy (poRT) with flaps have not been specified. We aimed to provide consensus recommendations to assist clinical decision-making highlighting areas of uncertainty in the presence of flaps.
Radiation, medical, and surgical oncologists were assembled from GORTEC and internationally with the Head and Neck Cancer International Group (HNCIG). The consensus-building approach covered 59 topics across four domains: (1) identification of postoperative tissue changes on imaging for flap delineation, (2) understanding of tumor relapse risks and target volume definitions, (3) functional radiation-induced deterioration, (4) feasibility of flap avoidance.
Across the 4 domains, international consensus (median score ≥ 7/9) was achieved only for functional deterioration (73.3%); other consensus rates were 55.6% for poRT avoidance of flap structures, 41.2% for flap definition and 11.1% for tumor spread patterns. Radiation-induced flap fibrosis or atrophy and their functional impact was well recognized while flap necrosis was not, suggesting dose-volume adaptation for the former. Flap avoidance was recommended to minimize bone flap osteoradionecrosis but not soft-tissue toxicity. The need for identification (CT planning, fiducials, accurate operative report) and targeting of the junction area at risk between native tissues and flap was well recognized. Experts variably considered flaps as prone to tumor dissemination or not. Discrepancies in rating of 11 items among international reviewing participants are shown.
International GORTEC and HNCIG-endorsed recommendations were generated for the management of flaps in head and neck radiotherapy. Considerable knowledge gaps hinder further consensus, in particular with respect to tumor spread patterns.
Mots-clé
Cancer, Consensus/recommendation, Flap, Head and neck, Postoperative radiotherapy, Reconstructive surgery
Pubmed
Web of science
Création de la notice
29/05/2021 15:13
Dernière modification de la notice
13/10/2021 5:43
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