ICMFS 2019

Influence of Preoperative Radiation Therapy on Microvascular Free Flap Success in OSCC Patients

Stefan Schultze-Mosgau
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery/ Plastic Surgery, University Hospital Jena

Objectives: The effect of preoperative radio-or radiochemotherapy on the survival of free flaps used for head and neck reconstruction is reported in a contradictory way. Although there is a lot of knowledge on radiation induced wound healing disorders from animal models there are no investigations on human patients so far.
This prospective study aimed at clarifying the effect of radiotherapy on clinically apparent free flap complications and on correlating them with radiation induced extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling.

Methods: Healing of 114 free flaps was monitored in a prospective study and correlated with different anamnestic features, like diabetes and radio-or radiochemotherapy using multivariate regression. During the operation connective tissue biopsies were harvested from the graft beds and analyzed for Transforming Growth Factor (TGF) 1-expression by means of western blotting as well as Tissue Inhibitor of Matrix-Metallo-Proteinase (TIMP)-1 and Matrix-Metallo-Proteinase (MMP)-1 by immunohistochemistry and histomorphometry.

Findings and Conclusions: History of radio-or radiochemotherapy was the only factor significantly (p = 0.032) predicting free flap complications. Radiotherapy resulted in a significant increase in TGF-1 (p = 0.021) and TIMP-1-expression (p = 0.024), while MMP-1-expression was not significantly altered. Radiotherapy alters graft bed ECM organization prior to surgery. This alteration impacts significantly on free flap survival in the preirradiated field.

Stefan Schultze-Mosgau
Stefan Schultze-Mosgau








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