Site Overlay

Title: Avoiding Enteral Gastrostomy Feeding in Locally Advanced Tongue Cancer with Free Flap Reconstruction – Three Year Experience of a Head and Neck Unit


Authors: 2, Abbi McCarron 1, Brian Maloney 1, Cian Henry 1, John Edward O'Connell 1, Yvonne Lydon 1
Publication: Journal of The Irish Head and Neck Society - 2025
Issue: 3 Volume: 3
Published: February, 2025 View PDF

Background:
Nutritional status is a major concern for head and neck cancer patients from diagnosis to survivorship. HNC and its treatment impair oral intake by compromising anatomical structures. After tumour ablation with free-flap reconstruction and adjuvant chemo-radiation, prolonged enteral feeding via gastrostomy is often required, though predicting this need is complex.

Aims and Objectives:
To assess oral intake following resection and free flap reconstruction of advanced tongue tumours. The primary outcome was gastrostomy dependence at six months post-treatment. The secondary outcome was oral intake, measured by the Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS).

Methodology:
This observational cohort study retrospectively reviewed a three-year prospectively maintained database. Patients undergoing surgery and free flap reconstruction for tongue SCC were included. Patient demographics, disease and treatment-related factors, and oral intake at baseline and six months were analyzed.

Results:
Eighteen patients were included, 67% with pT4 disease. Reconstruction involved radial forearm (44%), anterolateral thigh (44%), and fibular flaps (11%). At six months, eight patients (50%) required gastrostomy. Two subtotal glossectomy cases (20%) avoided gastrostomy. The mean FOIS was 4.3 (SD 2.1).

Conclusion:
Impaired nutrition affects survival in oral cancer. Half of patients required gastrostomy, highlighting the complexity of predicting enteral feeding needs in this cohort.

Tell us what went wrong - include any error codes & a screenshot if possible
Upload a screenshot if you have it
Accepted file types: jpg, gif, png, pdf, heic, doc, docx, Max. file size: 50 MB.
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

This will close in 0 seconds