Removing cancer, restoring quality of life | va houston health care | veterans affairs
Removing cancer, restoring quality of life | va houston health care | veterans affairs"
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In March 2021, Marine Veteran Mark Newton was diagnosed with cancer in the back of his throat and referred to the Houston VA Head and Neck multidisciplinary team. “I had a swollen lymph
node,” said Newton, who served from 1985 to 1989. “I had it checked out with a CT scan and then they did a biopsy. I had throat cancer.” The Houston resident underwent radiation and
chemotherapy for two months which successfully treated his cancer. But this type of treatment is not for the faint of heart. “Chemotherapy and radiation for head and neck cancer remains a
difficult treatment,” said Dr. Vlad Sandulache, chief of the ENT section of the Operative Care Line (OCL). “The radiation is five days a week for six to seven weeks. It can create an intense
burn on the skin and neck but also on the inside of your throat. But it is very effective in treating and curing head and neck cancer.” Newton was cancer free for about six months. But
unfortunately, it returned – this time in his lower jaw. “I went to dental because they pulled out all of my back molars,” he said. “There was one part that wasn’t healing very well. They
took a piece of bone out and ran a test on it.” Since repeating radiation in the head and neck region so soon is risky, surgery was the only remaining option for Newton. After removal of the
cancer, Dr. David Hernandez, a reconstructive surgeon in ENT section of the OCL, performed a microvascular (free flap) reconstructive surgery which consisted of replacing the right side of
Newton’s jaw with healthy fibular bone, muscle, and skin from his leg. “If you take out bone, you have to replace it with bone,” said Dr. Sandulache. “Once the cancer is removed, we use
computer modeling to fashion an identical match from fibular bone, connect it to the blood supply in the neck which is able to restore both form and function.” About five months following
the surgery, Newton is grateful to the surgery team. “I’ve healed really well,” said Newton. “I wish it never would have happened. As far as being cancer free in my jaw, yeah, I’m really
satisfied. I can get through all the other stuff.” BUILDING A FREE FLAP RECONSTRUCTION PROGRAM The Houston VA Head and Neck team receives referrals from VA facilities across the country
which includes about 150 new patients per year with cancer of the oral cavity, oropharynx, larynx, skin and thyroid. Of those, many will require surgery, and for advanced cancers, extensive,
often life-altering surgery. At the Houston VA, Dr. Hernandez led the effort to develop a free flap surgery program, focused on patients with advanced stage head and neck cancer that can
match the state of the science at leading academic centers in the U.S. Since 2017, the Head and Neck team which includes Dr. Hernandez and his partner at Baylor College of Medicine, Dr.
Andrew Huang, has performed more than 160 procedures with a complication rate of less than 1%. “Reconstructive surgery with a low complication rate and excellent outcomes is difficult to
achieve even at large academic institutions throughout the U.S.,” said Dr. Sandulache. “To be able to achieve both at the volume Dr. Hernandez is doing is incredibly rare.” The surgery is
also significant because some patients may be able to receive radiation a second time in case the cancer returns, since healthy tissue has now replaced the previously radiated tissue. “The
highly successful reconstructive program provides us with the opportunity to initiate radiation in a timely fashion and to tackle even complex cases of re-irradiation for recurrent cancer,”
said Dr. Albert Chen, chief of the Radiation Oncology section. “That was not possible in previous decades.” Next year, the team expects to perform about 50 free flap surgeries – saving
additional lives. “We have built this program into one of the busiest head and neck reconstructive practices within VHA,” said Dr. Sandulache. “Mr. Newton is one of the success stories but
he’s one of many and that’s the key here. It’s about building a program that’s able to do this consistently for thousands of patients over time.”
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