A J M Balm1, P J F M Lohuis, M P Copper. 1. Department of Head and Neck Oncology and Surgery, Netherlands Cancer Institute, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Hospital, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands. a.balm@nki.nl
Abstract
AIM: Description of a systematic approach to the neck for removal of lymph node bearing tissues in levels I-V. METHOD: A (modified) radical neck dissection is divided in three steps: (1) Dissection of levels I-IV, (2) dissection of level V and (3) transection of SCM bar and finalisation of the dissection. The sternocleidomastoid muscle (SCM) is used as a "bar", around which the different neck levels can be systematically unwrapped, warranting permanent cranio-caudal tension of the neck specimen, while anatomical relations remain intact. RESULTS: In a group of 115 (modified) radical en bloc neck dissections with or without post-operative radiotherapy 10% regional recurrences, 2% post-operative chylous fistulas and < 5% post-operative wound infections occurred. The overall 5 years survival was 45% (95% confidence interval: 36-54%). CONCLUSION: A systematic unwrapping of lymph node levels around the sternocleidomastoid bar provides a reliable systematic method for performing (modified) radical neck dissections without a negative influence on clinical outcome.
AIM: Description of a systematic approach to the neck for removal of lymph node bearing tissues in levels I-V. METHOD: A (modified) radical neck dissection is divided in three steps: (1) Dissection of levels I-IV, (2) dissection of level V and (3) transection of SCM bar and finalisation of the dissection. The sternocleidomastoid muscle (SCM) is used as a "bar", around which the different neck levels can be systematically unwrapped, warranting permanent cranio-caudal tension of the neck specimen, while anatomical relations remain intact. RESULTS: In a group of 115 (modified) radical en bloc neck dissections with or without post-operative radiotherapy 10% regional recurrences, 2% post-operative chylous fistulas and < 5% post-operative wound infections occurred. The overall 5 years survival was 45% (95% confidence interval: 36-54%). CONCLUSION: A systematic unwrapping of lymph node levels around the sternocleidomastoid bar provides a reliable systematic method for performing (modified) radical neck dissections without a negative influence on clinical outcome.
Authors: Arne Böttcher; Heidi Olze; Nadine Thieme; Carmen Stromberger; Steffen Sander; Adrian Münscher; Johannes Bier; Steffen Knopke Journal: J Cancer Res Clin Oncol Date: 2017-04-10 Impact factor: 4.553
Authors: Arne Böttcher; Christian S Betz; Stefan Bartels; Bjoern Schoennagel; Adrian Münscher; Lara Bußmann; Chia-Jung Busch; Steffen Knopke; Eric Bibiza; Nikolaus Möckelmann Journal: J Cancer Res Clin Oncol Date: 2020-08-18 Impact factor: 4.553