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Clinical Trial Summary

The use of cutaneous or fasciocutaneous flaps is daily in reconstructive surgery ENT in patients with cancers of the upper aero-digestive tract (AVDS). Cancers of the oral cavity require reconstructions with thin flaps in order to best preserve the functions of swallowing and phonation via patients' joints. Indeed, the flaps are inert tissues, which can only be mobilized by the residual muscles of the patients' tongue: their lightness and finesse facilitates this mobilization. The use of free flaps is regular but requires micro-surgical skill of the operator as well as a preserved general condition of the patients and appropriate post-operative care. Alternatively, there are some pedicled flaps with the appropriate thickness to reconstruct extensive loss of substances from the oral cavity in a suitable manner: the supraclavicular flap, the suprahyoid flap, the submental flap and the myo-mucosal flap pedicled on the facial artery being more limited in size. The creation of an anterior thoracic fasciocutaneous flap, pedicled on the anterior thoracic perforating artery (PATA) seems to be another suitable therapeutic option. Only one preliminary Chinese study describes it, on only eleven patients. According to the authors, it would offer a wide skin palette (up to 15x10cm). Its long pedicle (on average 9.2cm) would allow a significant axis of rotation so that the flap easily reaches the oral cavity. The authors underline the variability of the origin of this perforator, arising depending on the case from the transverse cervical trunk (9 cases) or from the supraclavicular artery (2 cases), branches of division of the thyro-cervical trunk. However, when the PATA arises from the supraclavicular artery, its interest could be limited because the creation of a PATA perforator flap could compromise the creation of a secondary supraclavicular flap. Thus, this study aims to clarify the feasibility of harvesting the PATA flap in the greatest number of patients. The objective is to study the variations of the anterior thoracic perforating artery necessary for the creation of this flap, by specifying its vascularization territory and its characteristics.


Clinical Trial Description

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Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06140160
Study type Interventional
Source Ramsay Générale de Santé
Contact Jean-François Oudet
Phone 0683346567
Email jf.oudet@ecten.eu
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 19, 2023
Completion date September 19, 2024