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The Impact of Neck Dissection on Health-Related Quality of Life
Sean Laverick, FDS, FRCS;
Derek Lowe, MSC, CStat;
James S. Brown, FDS, FRCS, MD;
E. David Vaughan, FDS, FRCS;
Simon N. Rogers, FDS, FRCS, MD
Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2004;130:149-154.
Objective To compare health-related quality of life in patients having no neck dissection and those having a selective dissection, with particular reference to shoulder dysfunction.
Design Prospective study.
Setting Regional Maxillofacial Unit, University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, England.
Patients Two hundred seventy-eight consecutive patients undergoing primary surgery for previously untreated oral and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma between January 1, 1995, and December 31, 1999.
Main Outcome Measure The University of Washington Quality of Life questionnaire, administered on the day before surgery and at 6 months, at 12 months, and more than 18 months after surgery.
Results No neck dissection was performed in 58 patients (21%), a unilateral dissection in 181 (65%), and a bilateral dissection in 39 (14%). Patients with no neck dissection and those with unilateral level III or IV dissections had similar mean scores for shoulder dysfunction, whereas patients with unilateral level V and bilateral level III and IV dissections recorded much worse scores on average.
Conclusions There is little subjective morbidity associated with shoulder dysfunction after a unilateral level III or IV neck dissection compared with patients undergoing primary surgery without a neck dissection. More extensive surgery in the neck, whether bilaterally removing levels I to III or IV or extending posteriorly to include level V, is associated with statistically significantly worse shoulder dysfunction.
From the Regional Maxillofacial Unit, University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, England (Drs Laverick, Brown, Vaughan, and Rogers); and Astraglobe Ltd, Mossley, Cheshire, England (Mr Lowe). The authors have no relevant financial interest in this article.
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