OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: At our institution, any liver transplant candidate with a recent history of smoking combined with daily use of alcohol prior to a 6-month sobriety period warrants formal evaluation by otolaryngology. Given the significant resource consumption and lack of evidence in support of this strategy, we sought to determine the effectiveness of these guidelines in detecting head and neck cancer. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review of clinical database and patient billing records. METHODS: Under an institutional review board-approved protocol, a search was performed for patients seen at our institution's otolaryngology office from 1999 to 2010. This patient list was cross-matched with the patients evaluated for transplant at the University of Pittsburgh Starzl Transplantation Institute during the same timeframe. A search for the diagnosis of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (HNC) among these patients was carried out through both a National Cancer Institute-affiliated clinical research registry and ICD-9 codes from billing records. Otolaryngology attending physicians were also asked to recall detection of HNC upon screening of this patient population. RESULTS: Of 581 patient evaluations performed by the otolaryngologist for HNC screening prior to liver transplantation from 1999 to 2009, one (0.17% of evaluations) case of HNC was detected. CONCLUSIONS: Given the consumption of resources required for this screening strategy and the limited yield, it appears that current screening guidelines are ineffective and need to be reconsidered.
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: At our institution, any liver transplant candidate with a recent history of smoking combined with daily use of alcohol prior to a 6-month sobriety period warrants formal evaluation by otolaryngology. Given the significant resource consumption and lack of evidence in support of this strategy, we sought to determine the effectiveness of these guidelines in detecting head and neck cancer. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review of clinical database and patient billing records. METHODS: Under an institutional review board-approved protocol, a search was performed for patients seen at our institution's otolaryngology office from 1999 to 2010. This patient list was cross-matched with the patients evaluated for transplant at the University of Pittsburgh Starzl Transplantation Institute during the same timeframe. A search for the diagnosis of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (HNC) among these patients was carried out through both a National Cancer Institute-affiliated clinical research registry and ICD-9 codes from billing records. Otolaryngology attending physicians were also asked to recall detection of HNC upon screening of this patient population. RESULTS: Of 581 patient evaluations performed by the otolaryngologist for HNC screening prior to liver transplantation from 1999 to 2009, one (0.17% of evaluations) case of HNC was detected. CONCLUSIONS: Given the consumption of resources required for this screening strategy and the limited yield, it appears that current screening guidelines are ineffective and need to be reconsidered.
Authors: P Vineis; M Alavanja; P Buffler; E Fontham; S Franceschi; Y T Gao; P C Gupta; A Hackshaw; E Matos; J Samet; F Sitas; J Smith; L Stayner; K Straif; M J Thun; H E Wichmann; A H Wu; D Zaridze; R Peto; R Doll Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst Date: 2004-01-21 Impact factor: 13.506
Authors: W J Blot; J K McLaughlin; D M Winn; D F Austin; R S Greenberg; S Preston-Martin; L Bernstein; J B Schoenberg; A Stemhagen; J F Fraumeni Journal: Cancer Res Date: 1988-06-01 Impact factor: 12.701
Authors: Frans van der Heide; Gerard Dijkstra; Robert J Porte; Jan H Kleibeuker; Elizabeth B Haagsma Journal: Liver Transpl Date: 2009-06 Impact factor: 5.799
Authors: Roberto Gedaly; Patrick P McHugh; Thomas D Johnston; Hoonbae Jeon; Alvaro Koch; Timothy M Clifford; Dinesh Ranjan Journal: Transplantation Date: 2008-10-27 Impact factor: 4.939