Factors Impacting Successful Salvage of the Failing Free Flap

Megan Crawley, Additional authors and institutional affiliations

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background:  Understanding factors impacting successful salvage of a compromised free flap.
Methods:  Multi-institutional review of free flap reconstructions for head and neck defects (n = 1764).
Results:  Free flap compromise rate: 9% (n = 162); 46% salvaged (n = 74). Higher salvage rates in initial 48 hours (64%) vs after (30%; P < .001). Greater compromise (14%) and failure (8%) if inset challenging vs straightforward (6% compromise, 4% failure; P = .035). Greater compromise (23%) and failure (17%) following intraoperative anastomosis revision vs no revision (7% compromise, 4% failure; P < .0001). Success following arterial insufficiency was lower (60% failed, 40% salvaged) vs venous congestion (23% failed, 77% salvaged) (P < .0001). Greater flap salvage following thrombectomy (66%) vs no thrombectomy (34%; P < .0001). Greater flap salvage if operative duration ≤8 hours (57%), vs >8 hours (40%) (P = .04).
Conclusions:  There were higher rates of free flap salvage if the vascular compromise occurred within 48 hours, if due to venous congestion, if operative duration ≤8 hours, and if the anastomosis did not require intraoperative revision.
Keywords:  free flap; free flap salvage; head and neck reconstruction; outcomes; surgical complications.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalHead & Neck
Volume42
StatePublished - Aug 26 2020

Disciplines

  • Medicine and Health Sciences

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