Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Effect of vocal rehabilitation after chemoradiation for non-laryngeal head and neck cancers

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Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital. 2021 Apr;41(2):131-141. doi: 10.14639/0392-100X-N0977.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the effect of voice intervention in patients who received chemoradiation to the neck for non-laryngeal head and neck malignancies.

METHODS: Twenty individuals with non-laryngeal malignancies of the head and neck who received chemoradiation were divided by block randomisation into an intervention group that received voice rehabilitation and a contr ol group without rehabilitation. All patients underwent acoustic analysis, perceptual and subjective analysis of voice before the commencement of chemoradiotherapy and at 1, 3 and 6 months after chemoradiotherapy.

RESULTS: In both groups, all parameters were significantly altered at one month follow-up except for fundamental frequency (females in control group and males in intervention group). In the intervention group, all parameters returned to pretreatment levels (no statistical differences) at 6 months. In the control group, all except for a few subjective parameters (grade, breathiness and asthenia) remained significantly altered at 6 months compared to the levels before radiotherapy.

CONCLUSIONS: In non-laryngeal head and neck malignancies, voice rehabilitation offered at 1 month after treatment ameliorates chemoradiation-induced dysphonia within 6 months.

PMID:34028457 | DOI:10.14639/0392-100X-N0977

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