Home /Research /Functional Organ Preservation Surgery in Head and Neck Cancer: Transoral Robotic Surgery and Beyond
SURGICAL

Functional Organ Preservation Surgery in Head and Neck Cancer: Transoral Robotic Surgery and Beyond

Wojciech Golusiński

Year
2019
Citations
31
Access
Open access

Abstract

In recent years, interest in functional organ preservation surgery (FOPS) in the treatment of head and neck cancer has increased dramatically as clinicians seek to minimize the adverse effects of treatment while maximizing survival and quality of life. In this context, the use of transoral robotic surgery (TORS) is becoming increasingly common. TORS is a relatively new and rapidly-evolving technique, with a growing range of treatment indications. A wide range of novel, flexible surgical robots are now in development and their commercialization is expected to significantly expand the current indications for TORS. In the present review, we discuss the current and future role of this organ-preserving modality as the central element in the multimodal treatment of head and neck cancer.

Keywords

Transoral robotic surgeryMedicineHead and neck cancerContext (archaeology)Robotic surgeryHead and neckQuality of life (healthcare)SurgeryAdverse effectCancer

Related papers

Browse all SURGICAL papers