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Transoral Robotic Surgery or Standard Surgery in Treating Patients With Benign or Malignant Tumors of the Larynx and Pharynx

Phase 1
Completed
Conditions
Perioperative/Postoperative Complications
Head and Neck Cancer
Precancerous Condition
Interventions
Procedure: assessment of therapy complications
Procedure: diagnostic endoscopic surgery
Procedure: quality-of-life assessment
Procedure: therapeutic conventional surgery
Procedure: therapeutic endoscopic surgery
Procedure: transoral robotic surgery
Procedure: video-assisted surgery
Registration Number
NCT00918762
Lead Sponsor
Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute
Brief Summary

RATIONALE: Transoral robotic surgery may make it easier to find and remove benign or malignant tumors of the larynx and pharynx and cause less damage to normal tissue. It is not yet known whether transoral robotic surgery is more effective than standard surgery in diagnosing and treating larynx and pharynx tumors.

PURPOSE: This phase I trial is studying how well transoral robotic surgery works compared with standard surgery in treating patients with benign or malignant tumors of the larynx or pharynx.

Detailed Description

OBJECTIVES:

Primary

* Evaluate the potential benefits of using the transoral robotic surgical approach against the conventional open and transoral approaches in patients with benign or malignant disease involving the larynx and pharynx.

Secondary

* Determine the proportion of laryngeal and pharyngeal surgical procedures where the surgical exposure is adequate to allow the successful completion of the surgical resection using the transoral robotic surgical approach.

OUTLINE: Patients are assigned to transoral robotic surgery or standard therapy consisting of conventional transoral endoscopic or open approach according to their preference.

Patients undergo planned surgical procedures (either diagnostic or therapeutic) appropriate for their disease in the larynx or pharynx via the transoral robotic surgical approach or the conventional transoral endoscopic or open approach.

Patients complete the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Head and Neck Scale, the Performance Status Scale for Head and Neck Cancer Patients, and the University of Washington Quality of Life Scale at baseline and at 3 and 6 months. Patients also undergo voice analysis by acoustic analyses, and speech and swallow pathology evaluation by videostroboscopy and modified barium swallow.

After completion of study procedure, patients are followed at 3 and 6 months.

PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 80 patients will be accrued to the control group (standard conventional surgery) and 30 patients will be accrued to the robotic surgery group.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
6
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
daVinci® Robotic Surgical Systemtherapeutic conventional surgeryParticipants will undergo a planned surgical procedures via the robotic approach.
daVinci® Robotic Surgical Systemtherapeutic endoscopic surgeryParticipants will undergo a planned surgical procedures via the robotic approach.
daVinci® Robotic Surgical Systemassessment of therapy complicationsParticipants will undergo a planned surgical procedures via the robotic approach.
daVinci® Robotic Surgical Systemquality-of-life assessmentParticipants will undergo a planned surgical procedures via the robotic approach.
daVinci® Robotic Surgical Systemdiagnostic endoscopic surgeryParticipants will undergo a planned surgical procedures via the robotic approach.
daVinci® Robotic Surgical Systemtransoral robotic surgeryParticipants will undergo a planned surgical procedures via the robotic approach.
daVinci® Robotic Surgical Systemvideo-assisted surgeryParticipants will undergo a planned surgical procedures via the robotic approach.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Operative time that directly affects operative costpost operative
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Need for reconstructionpost operative
Intra-operative and post-operative complicationsduring the operation and post operative
Margins statuspost operative
Blood lossDuring surgery
Length of hospital stayduring time as inpatient
Tracheostomy and PEG dependencepost operative
Days to oral intakepost operative
Speech intelligibilitypost operative
Proportion of robotic surgical cases where adequate surgical exposure allowed for successful operation completionpost operative
Time to locoregional recurrencepost operative
Quality of life3 months and 6 month following completion of surgery
Postoperative painpost operative

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute

🇺🇸

Detroit, Michigan, United States

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