Oral, head and neck cancer represents 3% of all cancers in the United States and is the 6th most common cancer worldwide. Recent studies have shown a five-fold increase in the incidence of squamous cell carcinomas of the oral portion of the tongue among young men and a six-fold increase among young women. Glossectomy is the surgical removal of a cancerous tumor. The amount of tongue tissue removed is not negotiable, because the surgeon must remove the entire tumor plus about 1 cm of tissue around it. The reconstructive phase focuses on maximizing the patient's post-operative quality of life, including the critical function of speech. Patients with poor speech avoid social situations, develop self-consciousness, and even depression. Surgeons must choose a reconstruction method, such as primary closure (suture the wound), or replacement with a 'flap'of tissue taken from elsewhere in the body. Larger tumors (above 4 cm in largest dimension) almost always require some type of flap. Among early stage tumors, however, there is no consensus as to the optimal closure procedure. We propose an objective study of patients for whom precise tumor-node-metastasis staging and specific surgical treatments have been established. We will study partial- to hemiglossectomy with primary closure, secondary healing and radial forearm free flap. We will focus on discovering the relationships between reconstruction technique and successful glossectomy speech as mediated by characteristics of tongue motion, kinematic properties of the residual muscles, and configurations of the vocal tract. We have research aims organized to address the following hypotheses. 1(a): Glossectomy speech quality will correlate with tongue motion pattern. 1(b): Tongue motion components that affect speech will vary by surgical type. 2(a): Glossectomy speech quality reflects the success of altered muscle mechanics. 2(b): Muscle mechanics that relate to speech quality will vary by surgical type. 3: A vocal tract model that maps geometry to acoustics can provide targeted speech therapy and can inform surgical decisions.
In Aim 3 we will use the knowledge gained in Aims 1 and 2 along with both a 1D and a 3D acoustic model to represent post-glossectomy vocal tracts and then modify them to reflect changes in size and shape of flap or resected region. Results of the project will include a unique atlas of normal tongue deformation and patient comparisons, a better understanding of the impacts of tongue cancer surgery on the tongue and speech, and a tool to help understand speech outcomes of surgical modifications.

Public Health Relevance

Tongue cancer surgery is a life saving procedure, but it typically leaves patients physically and mentally damaged, with speech communication difficulties that are in play every day. This research is an attempt to improve the speech outcome of tongue cancer surgery by minimizing the impact of the tongue reconstruction and understanding the contributions of patient and surgical factors, so patients can communicate more clearly. This will in turn diminish their own feelings of inadequacy, depression, and withdrawal from society.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01CA133015-02
Application #
7841779
Study Section
Motor Function, Speech and Rehabilitation Study Section (MFSR)
Program Officer
Alfano, Catherine M
Project Start
2009-05-12
Project End
2014-04-30
Budget Start
2010-05-01
Budget End
2011-04-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$516,286
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Maryland Baltimore
Department
Other Basic Sciences
Type
Schools of Dentistry
DUNS #
188435911
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21201
Xing, Fangxu; Prince, Jerry L; Stone, Maureen et al. (2018) Strain Map of the Tongue in Normal and ALS Speech Patterns from Tagged and Diffusion MRI. Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng 10574:
Woo, Jonghye; Xing, Fangxu; Lee, Junghoon et al. (2018) A Spatio-Temporal Atlas and Statistical Model of the Tongue During Speech from Cine-MRI. Comput Methods Biomech Biomed Eng Imaging Vis 6:520-531
Woo, Jonghye; Prince, Jerry L; Stone, Maureen et al. (2018) A Sparse Non-negative Matrix Factorization Framework for Identifying Functional Units of Tongue Behavior from MRI. IEEE Trans Med Imaging :
Stone, Maureen; Woo, Jonghye; Lee, Junghoon et al. (2018) Structure and variability in human tongue muscle anatomy. Comput Methods Biomech Biomed Eng Imaging Vis 6:499-507
(2017) Subject-Specific Biomechanical Modelling of the Oropharynx: Towards Speech Production. Comput Methods Biomech Biomed Eng Imaging Vis 5:416-426
Xing, Fangxu; Woo, Jonghye; Lee, Junghoon et al. (2016) Analysis of 3-D Tongue Motion From Tagged and Cine Magnetic Resonance Images. J Speech Lang Hear Res 59:468-79
Ibragimov, Bulat; Prince, Jerry L; Murano, Emi Z et al. (2015) Segmentation of tongue muscles from super-resolution magnetic resonance images. Med Image Anal 20:198-207
Ye, Chuyang; Murano, Emi; Stone, Maureen et al. (2015) A Bayesian approach to distinguishing interdigitated tongue muscles from limited diffusion magnetic resonance imaging. Comput Med Imaging Graph 45:63-74
Woo, Jonghye; Lee, Junghoon; Murano, Emi Z et al. (2015) A High-resolution Atlas and Statistical Model of the Vocal Tract from Structural MRI. Comput Methods Biomech Biomed Eng Imaging Vis 3:47-60
Woo, Jonghye; Stone, Maureen; Prince, Jerry L (2015) Multimodal registration via mutual information incorporating geometric and spatial context. IEEE Trans Image Process 24:757-69

Showing the most recent 10 out of 29 publications