Long-term stability of jaw reconstruction with microvascular bone flaps: A prospective longitudinal study

•The reconstructed jaws lacked stability during long-term follow-up.•Inaccurate surgery, mandible angle resection, and radiotherapy affected stability.•Stable reconstruction was observed in patients without postoperative radiotherapy.•How reconstructed jaw instability affects functional outcomes war...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oral oncology 2024-05, Vol.152, p.106780-106780, Article 106780
Hauptverfasser: Pu, Jingya Jane, Choi, Wing Shan, Wong, May C.M., Wu, Songying, Leung, Pui Hang, Yang, Wei-fa, Su, Yu-Xiong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The reconstructed jaws lacked stability during long-term follow-up.•Inaccurate surgery, mandible angle resection, and radiotherapy affected stability.•Stable reconstruction was observed in patients without postoperative radiotherapy.•How reconstructed jaw instability affects functional outcomes warrants further study. Microvascular bone flap jaw reconstruction has achieved satisfactory clinical outcomes. However, little is known about the long-term stability of the reconstructed jaw. This prospective longitudinal study aimed to investigate the long-term stability of jaw reconstruction and factors that were associated with it. Patients with successful computer-assisted osseous free-flap jaw reconstruction in the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong were recruited for this prospective longitudinal study. The three-dimensional jaw models at the pre-operative plan, post-operative 1-month, and 2 years were aligned and compared. A total of 69 patients were recruited, among which 48 patients were available for the long-term analysis. Compared to 1-month after surgery, further deviation from the pre-operative plan was observed at post-operative 2 years. Lack of accuracy in surgery, segmental mandible resection especially with the involvement of mandible angles, and post-operative radiation therapy were identified as the significant factors affecting the positional stability of the reconstructed jaw (p 
ISSN:1368-8375
1879-0593
DOI:10.1016/j.oraloncology.2024.106780