Is frozen section reliable in transoral CO(2) laser-assisted cordectomies?

Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol

Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Department, University Hospital of Louvain at Mont-Godinne, Dr Therasse Avenue, No. 1, 5530 Yvoir, Belgium.

Published: March 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Endoscopic resection is becoming more common for treating laryngeal tumors, but it poses challenges in accurately interpreting tissue samples due to thermal effects from lasers.
  • A study reviewed 97 patients who underwent different types of cordectomies, analyzing tumor stages and results from frozen sections compared to routine histology.
  • The findings showed that frozen section analysis is reliable in these procedures, confirming results 94.8% of the time, which can reduce the need for additional surgeries and associated costs and stress.

Article Abstract

Endoscopic resection of laryngeal tumors is replacing external approaches. One drawback of endoscopic resection is the difficulty of interpretation of histological specimens because of thermal effect of laser on tissues. Our goal is to assess the reliability of frozen section in this setting by comparing its results with those of routine histology. We, retrospectively, reviewed the charts of all consecutive patients, who underwent cordectomies in our institution between January 2000 and 2008, using the CO(2) laser Acublade system (Lumenis, Santa Clara, CA). Age, sex, staging of the tumor, previous treatments, type of cordectomy, frozen section and routine histology results were analyzed. Ninety-seven patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria; 22.7% had severe dysplasia, 54.6% had T1 epidermoid carcinoma, 17.5% had T2 carcinoma and finally 5.2% had T3 carcinoma. We performed type I cordectomy in 36.1% of patients, type II cordectomy in 18.6%, type III cordectomy in 10.3%, type IV cordectomy in 5.2%, type V cordectomy in 28.9% and type VI cordectomy in 1% of patients. Most of the patients did not have any previous treatment. The mean number of margins per surgery was 2. Routine histological examination confirmed frozen section in 94.8% of the interventions. Frozen section is reliable in laser-assisted cordectomies, when performed by an experienced team; it has a high negative-predictive value. It can limit the need, cost and emotional stress of second look surgeries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00405-009-1101-xDOI Listing

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