What Researchers Did
Researchers examined whether early HBOT in patients with laryngopharyngeal radionecrosis improved organ preservation rates and reduced the need for surgical resection.
What They Found
Patients who received HBOT early in the course of radionecrosis had significantly higher rates of organ preservation compared to those treated later or without HBOT. Early intervention appeared to reverse ischemic tissue damage before permanent necrosis developed.
What This Means for Canadian Patients
Laryngopharyngeal radionecrosis is a devastating complication for head and neck cancer survivors. Early referral for HBOT at Canadian centres could help preserve speech and swallowing function in affected patients.
Canadian Relevance
Covers an OHIP-covered indication: delayed radiation injury (radionecrosis). Ontario patients with radiation-induced tissue necrosis of the larynx or pharynx may be eligible for publicly funded HBOT.
Study Limitations
The retrospective design and variation in timing of HBOT referral introduce selection bias in outcome comparisons.