Publication

Airway management in head and neck cancer patients undergoing microvascular free tissue transfer: delayed extubation as an alternative to routine tracheotomy

Journal Paper/Review - Mar 7, 2014

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Meerwein C, Pezier T, Beck-Schimmer B, Schmid S, Huber G. Airway management in head and neck cancer patients undergoing microvascular free tissue transfer: delayed extubation as an alternative to routine tracheotomy. Swiss Med Wkly 2014; 144:w13941.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Swiss Med Wkly 2014; 144
Publication Date
Mar 7, 2014
Issn Electronic
1424-3997
Pages
w13941
Brief description/objective

QUESTIONS UNDER STUDY
The aim of this study was to evaluate two practices of airway management in patients undergoing head and neck cancer (HNC) resection and microvascular free tissue transfer (MFTT), and to assess the advantages and disadvantages of the two approaches.

METHODS
Patients undergoing a delayed extubation approach (NO-TRACH group) and patients undergoing primary tracheotomy (PRIM-TRACH group) were retrospectively evaluated in terms of perioperative and postoperative outcome measures.

RESULTS
Not performing routine tracheotomy was safe and no perioperative airway complications occurred. NO-TRACH patients were extubated after 1.1 ± 0.9 days (mean ± standard deviation) and secondary tracheotomy was necessary in three patients (13%). NO-TRACH patients revealed decreased duration of surgery (p <0.05) and showed trends to earlier resumption of oral feeding and decreased length of hospitalisation. Flap complication rates were similar in both groups, with an overall flap survival rate of 97.5% (n = 39/40).

CONCLUSIONS
With appropriate postoperative care, carefully selected patients undergoing major HNC resections with MFTT can be safely managed without routine tracheotomy.