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Head and Neck Free Flap Reconstruction: Current Landscape and Emerging Technologies.

Created on 06 Jul 2026

Authors

Sholem Hack, Eric Remer, Eran E Alon, Tang Ho, Kunal S Jain, Ron J Karni

Published in

Otolaryngology--head and neck surgery : official journal of American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. Jul 06, 2026. Epub Jul 06, 2026.

Abstract

To synthesize contemporary developments in head and neck oncologic free flap reconstruction, with emphasis on perioperative physiologic optimization, digital integration, and functional recovery.
MEDLINE (PubMed), Scopus, and Embase were searched for English-language human studies published between January 2020 and November 2025. Reference lists of relevant systematic reviews, consensus guidelines, and high-impact primary studies were manually reviewed to identify additional sources.
This structured state-of-the-art narrative review examined contemporary conceptual, physiologic, and technological developments rather than pooled quantitative outcomes. Priority was given to systematic reviews, consensus statements, randomized or quasi-experimental ERAS studies, high-volume cohort analyses, and translational research with direct relevance to oncologic free flap reconstruction. Evidence was synthesized thematically across perioperative optimization, intraoperative physiology, reconstructive strategy, salvage reconstruction, digital and artificial intelligence-enabled tools, and functional and survivorship outcomes. Studies limited to benign disease, trauma, pediatric populations, or isolated technical descriptions without perioperative or oncologic context were excluded.
Contemporary head and neck free flap reconstruction has evolved toward a more integrated, systems-oriented model that extends beyond technical reliability. ERAS pathways, frailty-informed assessment, refined intraoperative physiology, and contemporary salvage strategies have informed perioperative management in complex patient populations. Digital planning and emerging computational tools have improved precision and workflow efficiency in selected settings, although many applications remain investigational. Functional outcomes have also gained prominence as important measures of reconstructive success.
Optimal outcomes depend on coordinated perioperative pathways, patient-specific physiologic optimization, judicious intraoperative management, and structured assessment of functional recovery and survivorship.

PMID:
42405853
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 06 Jul 2026.

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