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  Vol. 133 No. 12, December 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Aspiration in Chemoradiated Patients With Head and Neck Cancer

Alexander Langerman, MD; Ellen MacCracken, MS; Kristen Kasza, MS; Daniel J. Haraf, MD; Everett E. Vokes, MD; Kerstin M. Stenson, MD

Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2007;133(12):1289-1295.

Objective  To review the incidence of aspiration after chemoradiation therapy in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC).

Design  Retrospective review.

Setting  Academic institution.

Patients  One hundred thirty patients with advanced HNC underwent chemoradiation therapy at our institution between 1998 and 2002 as part of a larger, multi-institutional, prospective study of induction chemotherapy followed by chemoradiation therapy; the 118 patients (91%) for whom oropharyngeal motility (OPM) study data were available are discussed in this article.

Main Outcome Measures  Incidence of trace (≤ 5% of swallowed bolus) and frank (> 5%) aspiration (deep laryngeal or tracheal penetration) as determined by pretreatment and posttreatment OPM studies and correlation of the findings with the patients' reported symptoms.

Results  Eighty-one patients (69%) underwent at least 1 OPM study demonstrating aspiration within the first year after chemoradiation therapy, with 30 (25%) demonstrating frank aspiration. Of the patients who aspirated, 61 (75%) reported no symptoms of coughing or choking (80% of trace and 67% of frank aspirators). The patients with cancer of the larynx and hypopharynx were more likely to be aspirators (P = .007 and P = .004, respectively). Of the 62 patients with available pretreatment OPM data, 33 (53%) demonstrated aspiration at baseline.

Conclusions  Aspiration is highly prevalent among patients with advanced HNC at baseline and is worse in the posttreatment period after chemoradiation therapy. The majority of these patients report no symptoms. All patients with advanced HNC should undergo instrumental swallow assessment, even in the absence of symptoms, to detect subclinical aspiration and to institute therapeutic maneuvers and swallow precautions as well as to determine the safety of oral feeding.


Author Affiliations: Department of Surgery, Section of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery (Drs Langerman and Stenson and Ms MacCracken), Departments of Health Studies (Ms Kasza) and Radiation Oncology and Biophysics (Dr Haraf), and Department of Medicine, Section of Hematology and Oncology (Dr Vokes), University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.







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