Surgical treatment of hypopharyngeal cancer
Date
2018Author
Başaran, Bora
Kıyak, Ökkeş Erkan
Aslan, İsmet
Güneş, Selçuk
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objectives: This study aims to evaluate our department’s approach to the treatment of hypopharyngeal tumors, the features of the
tumors, the survival analyses and to present our results in the light of the literature.
Patients and Methods: Eighty-one hypopharyngeal tumor patients and four patients with undefined primary origin, those patients
with undefined origin have tumors that infiltrate both hypopharynx and cervical esophagus, totally 85 patients (56 males, 29 females;
mean age 54.6±13.4 years; range, 23 to 81 years) who underwent surgical treatment, were included in this study. Demographic data,
tumor characteristics, and treatment protocols were recorded retrospectively.
Results: Patients were classified on the primary subsite of the hypopharynx: 51% originated from the sinus piriformis, 29% from the
postcricoid area, 15% from the posterior wall of the pharynx and only 5% from the cervical esophagus. The relationship between sex
and hypopharyngeal subsite was statistically significant (p<0.001); postcricoid tumors were more prominent in female patients. Also,
patients with a history of tobacco use had a tendency for tumors originating from the piriform sinus (p<0.001). Additionally, highly
significant differences were revealed between clinical and pathological T and N staging (p<0.001). Estimated 60-month survival rate
was 45%.
Conclusion: The majority of patients in the study group were not old-aged or alcohol consumers; particularly none of the female
patients had any bad habit as a predisposing factor suggested in the etiology. The relationships between tumor site and smoking
show that if the campaign against smoking is successful, the rate of sinus piriformis cancer will decrease. For a significant number
of patients, primary surgical reconstruction was possible, which shortens postoperative recovery time and accelerates postoperative
adjuvant therapy. Therefore, survival rates were found to be high.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/104922http://dx.doi.org/10.5606/Tr-ENT.2018.22931
https://doi.org/10.5606/tr-ent.2018.22931
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