Comparative analysis of surgical and prosthetic rehabilitation in maxillectomy: A
systematic review and meta-analysis on quality-of-life scores and objective speech
and masticatory measurements
Patients with oro-antral communication, whether from trauma, disease, or congenital
anomalies, have options for surgical reconstruction or prosthetic obturation, but
guiding interdisciplinary protocols are lacking.The purpose of this systematic review
and meta-analysis was to compare surgical reconstruction and prosthetic obturation,
identifying correlations with baseline characteristics to determine the most effective
approach for specific patients.A systematic search was conducted in 4 databases. Searching,
screening, data extraction, and risk of bias assessment were performed by 2 reviewers.
Eligible studies focused on patients with palatomaxillary defects from cancer-related
maxilla surgeries. Traumatic or congenital defects were excluded. The study compared
prosthetic restoration (either with surgical or definitive obturators) to surgical
reconstruction using flaps or grafts. Patients with surgical restoration after tooth
extraction were excluded. Both subjective and objective outcomes were used for comparison.Thirteen
articles were included in the qualitative synthesis and 9 in the meta-analysis. Patient
scores on quality-of-life questionnaires, objective speech, and masticatory ability
evaluations were compared. The number of patients who underwent surgical reconstruction
was 206, whereas 260 patients received prosthetic obturators. Results showed no significant
differences. In the "activity" domain of the University of Washington QoL questionnaire,
however, the 1.92 (0.45, 3.40) score difference was not clinically relevant. However,
the heterogeneity of trials, the transient nature of subjective evaluations, the low
number of participants, and major confounding biases did not allow a solid conclusion
to be drawn.The growing number of maxillectomy patients demands firm evidence on which
rehabilitation to choose and when it should be done. The result suggests that obturator
devices and surgical reconstruction have similar effects on quality of life and health
outcomes. A multicentric registry in which patient strata could be analyzed separately
by age, adjuvant therapies, defect sizes, and remaining dentition is advocated.