J. Pikani et al., CLINICAL-EVALUATION OF THE PECTORALIS MAJOR FLAP FOR RECONSTRUCTION IN HEAD AND NECK-CANCER, Scandinavian journal of plastic and reconstructive surgery and hand surgery, 28(3), 1994, pp. 217-223
Sixty two patients (7 women and 55 men) with head and neck cancer unde
rwent 64 musculocutaneous or osteomusculocutaneous reconstructions in
the Department of Head and Neck Tumours, Estonian Cancer Centre, from
May 1988 to December 1991. Two men had two reconstructions. The patien
ts were evaluated for surgical, functional, aesthetic, and also for on
cological results. The flap-related complication rate was higher among
women than men (6/7 (86%) compared with 19/57 (33%), p = 0.012), and
in the group of osteomusculocutaneous flaps which contained a segment
of the fifth or sixth rib compared with the musculocutaneous ones (5/6
(83%) compared with 20/58 (34%), p = 0.03). The functional results we
re good or satisfactory in 41/60 (68%) of the cases. Mean follow-up ti
me was 32 months; 31/58 (53%) of patients operated on due to primary o
r recurrent cancer are alive, with or without recurrent disease. We do
not recommend the inclusion of rib segments in pedicled pectoral flap
s for reconstructions of head and neck defects.