The Mail on Sunday

Robot that can cut out hard to reach throat tumours

- By Fiona MacRae and Roger Dobson

BRITISH surgeons are using a cutting- edge robot to remove difficult- to- reach throat tumours – through the mouths of patients. The pioneering operation is designed to dramatical­ly reduce the need for gruelling radiothera­py and chemothera­py, which can leave patients unable to swallow and dependent on a feeding tube for life.

With growing numbers of people developing throat cancer, it is more important than ever to have a range of effective treatments that lessen t he i mpact on quality of l i fe, says Asit Arora, consultant head and neck surgeon at Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Trust in London.

Once most common in elderly people with a history of drinking and smoking, rates of head and neck cancers have soared by 31 per cent in the past 25 years and are now as common in people in their 50s as in those in their 80s.

Much of the rise is attributed to HPV – a range of viruses that can be passed on during intimate and sexual contact. At least 80 per cent of the adult population carries some kinds of HPV on their skin, although most will never know it. In some cases, HPV can cause skin or genital warts, and other types are a known cause of cervical and anal cancers.

HPV can also infect the mouth and throat and is now to blame for at least half of throat cancers in the UK. Until a tumour occurs, the infection is typically symptomles­s.

Convention­al treatment for earlystage throat cancer involves either powerful radiothera­py and chemothera­py to destroy the tumour, or laser surgery to cut it out.

Courses of radiothera­py and chemothera­py are time-consuming – some patients make up to 30 trips to hospital over a few months.

The treatment can also damage the jaw and the swallowing muscles, meaning patients cannot eat without the help of a feeding tube.

Laser treatment is more gentle on the body but it can be difficult to cut out a hard-to-reach cancer completely and most patients need radiothera­py afterwards. Some also need chemothera­py.

Using the robot, the surgeon can zero in on the tumour and cut it away precisely. With the patient under general anaestheti­c, the surgeon controls the robot with his hands and feet. One of the robot arms holds a 3D camera, while two others wield tiny instrument­s that can be passed through the mouth and into the throat, and turned and twisted in ways impossible with the human hand alone.

‘Surgery in the mouth and throat can be challengin­g because you are working in very small areas, manipulati­ng surgical instrument­s in a tight space where there are important nerves and blood vessels to be avoided,’ says Mr Arora, who has pioneered robotic surgery for throat cancer in the UK.

‘With the latest robotic systems, we can be more targeted than ever before in how we treat these throat conditions in order to reduce unwanted side effects, particular­ly related to swallowing.’

Studies suggest that trans-oral robotic surgery (TORS) is at least as good as convention­al surgery, although a definitive comparison has yet to be carried out, says Mr Arora. But importantl­y, by cutting out the tumour so precisely, it may reduce the amount of chemothera­py and radiothera­py patients need.

A £4.5 million Cancer Research UK trial into the procedure is now being carried out at Guy’s and hospitals around the country.

Mr Arora has used the method to remove about 30 throat tumours in the year since setting up the service with Jean-Pierre Jeannon, Guy’s clinical director for cancer.

The operation takes 90 minutes and patients are usually discharged after two days. They then undertake rehab, including speech therapy.

Retired policeman David Wonfor, 60, chose to take part in the trial after being diagnosed with earlystage throat cancer last summer.

After his operation, David, 60, of Petts Wood, Kent, started on five weeks of low-dose radiothera­py. Although he lost weight and his sense of taste at first, he has now largely recovered, and says he is convinced that his recovery would have been very different if he had had chemothera­py.

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