Faruque Riffat1, Dakshika A Gunaratne, Carsten E Palme. 1. aDepartment of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery bCrown Princess Mary Cancer Centre, Westmead Hospital cUniversity of Sydney dChris O'Brien Lifehouse, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Head and neck cancer (HNC) imposes significant structural, functional, and cosmetic burdens upon those affected. Although advances in multimodality organ preservation therapy have assisted in ameliorating a number of previous treatment-related sequelae, dysphagia remains a foremost concern for members of the multidisciplinary team. Given its acute and long-term impact on physical and psychological wellbeing, and subsequent bearing on delivery of treatment, treatment-related morbidity and overall mortality, prompt recognition, and accurate assessment and optimization of management are pivotal. RECENT FINDINGS: Qualitative research has provided greater insight into the psychosocial burdens dysphagia imposes on HNC patients and carers, highlighting the need for holistic strategies of management. There is a growing body of evidence to support dietary alterations and preventive swallowing exercise regimens for maintenance of oral intake throughout and following HNC therapy. The role of prophylactic enteral feeding, however, remains uncertain, with conflicting institutional data and lack of high-quality prospective studies for meaningful systematic literature assessment. Endoscopic surgical techniques hold promise in relieving stricture-related dysphagia; however, multiple treatments are required and recurrence is common. SUMMARY: Swallowing rehabilitation encompassing education, dietary modification, and swallowing exercises comprise the mainstay of current evidence-based dysphagia management in HNC patients.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Head and neck cancer (HNC) imposes significant structural, functional, and cosmetic burdens upon those affected. Although advances in multimodality organ preservation therapy have assisted in ameliorating a number of previous treatment-related sequelae, dysphagia remains a foremost concern for members of the multidisciplinary team. Given its acute and long-term impact on physical and psychological wellbeing, and subsequent bearing on delivery of treatment, treatment-related morbidity and overall mortality, prompt recognition, and accurate assessment and optimization of management are pivotal. RECENT FINDINGS: Qualitative research has provided greater insight into the psychosocial burdens dysphagia imposes on HNC patients and carers, highlighting the need for holistic strategies of management. There is a growing body of evidence to support dietary alterations and preventive swallowing exercise regimens for maintenance of oral intake throughout and following HNC therapy. The role of prophylactic enteral feeding, however, remains uncertain, with conflicting institutional data and lack of high-quality prospective studies for meaningful systematic literature assessment. Endoscopic surgical techniques hold promise in relieving stricture-related dysphagia; however, multiple treatments are required and recurrence is common. SUMMARY: Swallowing rehabilitation encompassing education, dietary modification, and swallowing exercises comprise the mainstay of current evidence-based dysphagia management in HNC patients.
Authors: Jorine A Vermaire; Cornelis P J Raaijmakers; Evelyn M Monninkhof; C René Leemans; Robert J Baatenburg de Jong; Robert P Takes; Irma M Verdonck-de Leeuw; Femke Jansen; Johannes A Langendijk; Chris H J Terhaard; Caroline M Speksnijder Journal: Support Care Cancer Date: 2022-08-30 Impact factor: 3.359
Authors: Jorine A Vermaire; Chris H J Terhaard; Irma M Verdonck-de Leeuw; Cornelis P J Raaijmakers; Caroline M Speksnijder Journal: Head Neck Date: 2021-05-06 Impact factor: 3.821
Authors: Jorine A Vermaire; Cornelis P J Raaijmakers; Irma M Verdonck-de Leeuw; Femke Jansen; C René Leemans; Chris H J Terhaard; Caroline M Speksnijder Journal: Support Care Cancer Date: 2021-06-25 Impact factor: 3.603