KUMJ | VOL. 14 | NO. 3 | ISSUE 55 | JULY-SEPT. 2016
Therapeutic Neck Dissection in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma: Is Selective Neck Dissection the Way Ahead?
Manikantan K, Bang B, Sharan R, Mallick I, Chatterjee S, Arun P
Abstract: Background
Selective neck dissection in multimodality treatment protocols is slowly being
accepted for the management of N+ neck in many centers. This is because the
functional disability is lower than modified radical neck dissection.
Objective
This study compares the regional recurrence rates between patients who underwent
selective neck dissection and patients underwent comprehensive neck dissection for
node positive oral squamous cell carcinoma.
Method
A retrospective study comparing patients with node positive oral squamous cell
carcinoma who underwent either selective neck dissection or comprehensive neck
dissection between August 2011 and January 2014 was done, with a mean follow up
period of 12 months. Regional failures were assessed to whether they were isolated
neck failures or associated with a local or distant failure.
Result
A total of 131 neck dissections were performed which included 93 selective neck
dissections and 38 comprehensive neck dissections. A total of 17 patients developed
regional recurrence, of which 11 patients had ipsilateral neck recurrence. Of the 11
patients with ipsilateral neck recurrence one patient also had contralateral neck
nodes and in two patients there was associated distant metastasis.
Conclusion
Selective neck dissection for management of node positive neck disease is based
on sound scientific principles and a randomised controlled trial comparing it with
modified radical neck dissection would probably give the answer regarding the
optimal procedure for these patients.
Keyword : Lymph node dissection, oral cancer, radical neck dissection, squamous cell carcinoma