Background: Osteoradionecrosis (ORN) is an aggressive sequela of head and neck cancer, treatment of which focuses on functional restoration and quality-of-life (QoL). This study aims to identify risks for poor QoL in ORN reconstruction and build a chronologic, longitudinal framework for QoL.

Methods: A prospective database of reconstructions performed by the senior author was reviewed from 2015-2023. QoL metrics (University of Washington [UWQoL]v4) were prospectively administered prior to surgery, one year post-operatively, and each yearly follow-up.

Results: 56 ORN patients were included (average 58.2years, mean 6,412Gy radiation). Reconstruction commonly was achieved with the fibula(55.4%) and anterolateral-thigh flaps(37.5%). The total complication rate was 23.2%, median 10.7mo post-operatively.Both "health-related QoL in comparison with prior to cancer diagnosis" (62.5 vs 43.5;p=0.030) and "Overall QoL during the past 7-days" (50.5 vs 41.7;p=0.029) were higher post-ORN reconstruction than before. Physical-QoL was higher pre-cancer reconstruction (79.0) than prior to ORN reconstruction (50.6;p<0.001) and following reconstruction (52.5;p=0.001). Social-emotional function was higher following ORN reconstruction compared to pre-reconstruction (68.7 vs 59.6;p=0.010).On multi-variate analysis, both post-operative social-emotional and physical function were impacted by betelnut use (p=0.038;p=0.025). Poor improvement in QoL from pre to post-ORN reconstruction were affected by maxilla involvement (p=0.048), fistula (p=0.004), and hardware issues (p=0.001).

Conclusions: Our longitudinal experience trended decline in QoL at ORN diagnosis with gradual improvement following reconstruction, with eventual social-emotional, pain, anxiety, chewing, and global-QoL significantly improved following surgery. Betelnut was a risk factor for poor post-operative QoL. Maxillary involvement, post-op fistula and hardware issues were risks for non-improvement in QoL.

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