| Literature DB >> 28050201 |
Shirin M Hemmat1, Steven J Wang2, William R Ryan3.
Abstract
Introduction Neck dissection (ND) technique preferences are not well reported. Objective The objective of this study is to educate practitioners and trainees about surgical technique commonality and variance used by head and neck oncologic surgeons when performing a ND. Methods Online survey of surgeon members of the American Head and Neck Society (AHNS). Survey investigated respondents' demographic information, degree of surgical experience, ND technique preferences. Results In our study, 283 out of 1,010 (28%) AHNS surgeon members with a mean age of 50.3 years (range 32-77 years) completed surveys from 41 states and 24 countries. We found that 205 (72.4%) had completed a fellowship in head and neck surgical oncology. Also, 225 (79.5%) respondents reported completing more than 25 NDs per year. ND technique commonalities (>66% respondents) included: preserving level 5 (unless with suspicious lymph nodes (LN)), only excising the portion of sternocleidomastoid muscle involved with tumor, resecting lymphatic tissue en bloc, preservation of cervical sensory rootlets, not performing submandibular gland (SMG) transfer, placing one drain for unilateral selective NDs, and performing a ND after parotidectomy and thyroidectomy and before transcervical approaches to upper aerodigestive tract primary site. Variability existed in the sequence of LN levels excised, instrument preferences, criteria for drain removal, the timing of a ND with transoral upper aerodigestive tract primary site resections, and submandibular gland preservation. Results showed that 122 (43.1%) surgeons reported that they preserve the submandibular gland during the level 1b portion of a ND. Conclusions The commonalities and variances reported for the ND technique may help put individual preferences into context.Entities:
Keywords: graduate medical education; neck dissection; surgical instruments; survey and questionnaires
Year: 2016 PMID: 28050201 PMCID: PMC5205530 DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1592153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 1809-4864
Demographic information, neck dissection surgical volume, and neck dissection operative times of survey respondents
| Characteristic | |
| Total number of individuals who responded to the survey | 367 (36.3%) |
| Number of respondents who finished more than half the survey | 283 (77%) |
| Age | Mean: 50.3 years (Range 32–77) |
| Sex | |
| Men | 255 (90.1%) |
| Women | 28 (8.9%) |
| Current Level of Training | |
| Fellow | 29 (10.3%) |
| Attending | 254 (89.7%) |
| Type of Residency Training | |
| Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery | 235 (83.1%) |
| Non-Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 48 (16.9%) |
| Completed a Fellowship in Head and Neck Oncologic Surgery | |
| Yes | 205 (72.5%) |
| No | 78 (27.5%) |
| Number of Neck Dissections Per Year | |
| Less than 10 | 18 (6.4%) |
| 11–25 | 50 (17.6%) |
| 26–50 | 110 (38.9%) |
| Greater than 50 | 105(37.1%) |
| How long does it take to complete a neck dissection preserving SCM, IJV and CN 11, of the following levels? | |
| Levels 1–3 | Mean: 1.56 hours |
| Levels 1–4 | Mean: 1.89 hours |
| Levels 1–5 | Mean: 2.38 hours |
Aggregated responses to select questions regarding preservation of the submandibular gland (SMG), sternocleidomastoid muscle (SCM) and internal jugular vein during a neck dissection
|
| ||
| Do you perform SMG transfer? | ||
| Yes | 19 (6.7%) | |
| No | 264 (93.2%) | |
| When you do not preserve the SMG during an ND, what are your reasons? (Choose all that apply) | Usually | Do not usually Preserve SMG |
| Concern for incomplete lymph node removal | 79 (65.8%) | 138 (86.3%) |
| Preserving the gland would increase the difficulty of the resection of the primary cancer | 54 (45%) | 28 (17.5%) |
| Need to access level 1B for a free flap or pedicle reconstruction | 58 (48.3%) | 68 (42.5%) |
| Worried that it will be time consuming | 7 (5.8%) | 13 (8.1%) |
| Never trained to do so | 5 (4.2%) | 47 (30.6%) |
| Worried that presence of SMG will be concerning for a palpable lymph node during surveillance | 9 (7.5%) | 53 (33.1%) |
| Doubt that the SMG will work well after resection of lymph nodes around it | 10 (8.3%) | 16 (10%) |
| Doubt that the SMG will work well after radiation | 23 (19.2%) | 50 (31.3%) |
| Total # of Surgeons | 120 (42.9%) | 160 (57.1%) |
|
| ||
| Excise routinely; in most cases | 6 (2.1%) | |
| Excise when performing a salvage (post-radiation) neck dissection | 23 (8.1%) | |
| Excise only when involved with a tumor | 271 (95.4%) | |
Abbreviations: 11 ND, neck dissection; CN 11, Cranial Nerve; IJV, Internal Jugular Vein; SCM, Sternocleidomastoid; SMG, Submandibular Gland.
Fig. 1Sequence preferences for performing a neck dissection before or after primary carcinoma resection.
Fig. 2Respondent preferences of instrument for dissection of lymph nodes by level.
Fig. 3Instrument preferences for ligation/cauterization of a blood vessel during a neck dissection.
Commonalities, controversies and variance in neck dissection operative technique as determined by the percentage of surgeons that employ each practice
| Category | Commonality in ND technique preferences performed by most (>66%) surgeons (n, %) | Variability in ND technique preferences (<66%) (n, %) |
|---|---|---|
| Sequence | - ND after resection of parotidectomy (193, 75%) and thyroidectomy (169, 67.3%) | - Level 1 |
| Technique | - Do not perform SMG transfer (265, 93.3%) | - Preserves the submandibular gland (123, 43.3%) |
| Instruments | - Unipolar for raising subplatysmal skin flaps (192, 71.1%) | - Scalpel for removing LNs from IJV (128, 47.4%) |
| Drain | - Placing one drain, instead of two for NDs of levels 1–3 (226, 84.6%), levels 1–4 (196, 73.4%) and levels 2–4 (217, 82.8%) | - 2 Drains for levels 1–5 (141, 52.8%) |