Robotic Help For Oral Cancer
10/18/2006 Orlando, FL staff wftv.com Background: The American Cancer Society estimates about 30,990 new cases of oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer will be diagnosed in the United States in 2006. More than 7,000 people will die of these cancers this year. Oral cancer is cancer that starts in the mouth, while oropharyngeal cancer is cancer that develops in the part of the throat just behind the mouth, called the oropharynx. The treatment options for people with oral and oropharyngeal cancers are surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy either alone or in combination, depending on the stage of the tumor. Depending on where the cancer developed, surgeons may need to cut through the outside of the throat to get to the tumor. Gregory Weinstein, M.D., and Bert O'Malley, M.D., are co-directors of The Center for Head and Neck Cancer at the University of Pennsylvania. "Traditional approaches are incisions in the neck and into the throat to get exposure to the cancer," says Dr. Weinstein. "Sometimes it can be involved in splitting the jaw and opening up the tissues widely to get exposure to the lesions." A New Approach: Now, Drs. Weinstein and O'Malley are partnering on a new way to approach these kinds of cancers: through the mouth using robotic surgery equipment. "We haven't done a full objective analysis, but our experience suggests that patients do better in speech and swallowing after the surgery," says Dr. O'Malley. "We remove the entire tumor, but we don't have to do things such as live [...]