Examining the relationship of immunotherapy and wound complications following flap reconstruction in patients with head and neck cancer
Ashley C. Mays, Bharat B. Yarlagadda, Virginie Achim, Ryan S. Jackson, Patrik Pipkorn, Andrew T. Huang, Karthik Rajasekaran, Shaum Sridharan, Andrew J. Rosko, Ryan K. Orosco, Andrew Coughlin, Mark K. Wax, Yelizaveta Shnayder, William C Spanos, D. Gregory Farwell, Lee S. McDaniel, Matthew M. Hanasono
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immunotherapy agents are used to treat advanced head and neck lesions. We aim to elucidate relationship between immunotherapy and surgical wound complications. METHODS: Retrospective multi-institutional case series evaluating patients undergoing ablative and flap reconstructive surgery and immunotherapy treatment. MAIN OUTCOME: wound complications. RESULTS: Eight-two (62%) patients received preoperative therapy, 89 (67%) postoperative, and 33 (25%) in both settings. Forty-one (31%) patients had recipient site complications, 12 (9%) had donor site. Nineteen (14%) had major recipient site complications, 22 (17%) had minor. There was no statistically significant difference in complications based on patient or tumor-specific variables. Preoperative therapy alone demonstrated increased major complications (odds ratio [OR] 3.7, p = 0.04), and trend to more donor site complications (OR 7.4, p = 0.06), however treatment in both preoperative and postoperative therapy was not. CONCLUSIONS: Preoperative immunotherapy may be associated with increased wound complications. Controlled studies are necessary to delineate this association and potential risks of therapy.