Cancers (Jan 2023)

Patterns of Postoperative Trismus Following Mandibulectomy and Fibula Free Flap Reconstruction

  • Rex H. Lee,
  • Cara Evans,
  • Joey Laus,
  • Cristina Sanchez,
  • Katherine C. Wai,
  • P. Daniel Knott,
  • Rahul Seth,
  • Ivan H. El-Sayed,
  • Jonathan R. George,
  • William R. Ryan,
  • Chase M. Heaton,
  • Andrea M. Park,
  • Patrick K. Ha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15020536
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 536

Abstract

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The factors that contribute to postoperative trismus after mandibulectomy and fibula free flap reconstruction (FFFR) are undefined. We retrospectively assessed postoperative trismus (defined as a maximum interincisal opening ≤35 mm) in 106 patients undergoing mandibulectomy with FFFR, employing logistic regression to identify risk factors associated with this sequela. The surgical indication was primary ablation in 64%, salvage for recurrence in 24%, and osteonecrosis in 12%. Forty-five percent of patients had existing preoperative trismus, and 58% of patients received adjuvant radiation/chemoradiation following surgery. The overall rates of postoperative trismus were 76% in the early postoperative period (≤3 months after surgery) and 67% in the late postoperative period (>6 months after surgery). Late postoperative trismus occurred more frequently in patients with ramus-involving vs. ramus-preserving posterior mandibulotomies (82% vs. 46%, p = 0.004). A ramus-involving mandibulotomy was the only variable significantly associated with trismus >6 months postoperatively on multivariable logistic regression (OR, 7.94; 95% CI, 1.85–33.97; p = 0.005). This work demonstrates that trismus is common after mandibulectomy and FFFR, and suggests that posterior mandibulotomies that involve or remove the ramus may predispose to a higher risk of persistent postoperative trismus.

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