Journal of Contemporary Brachytherapy

Functional preservation in oral tongue cancer: Reflections on HyBIRT and surgical management

  1. Department of Stomatology, Suzhou Wujiang District Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Suzhou City, PR China

Online publish date: 2026/05/27
View full text

Dear Editor,

I read with great interest the recent article by Kai Ping Ong et al. published in the Journal of Contemporary Brachytherapy, which compared swallowing outcomes between upfront high-dose-rate interstitial brachytherapy followed by IMRT (HyBIRT) and surgery in patients with oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC) [1]. The authors should be commended for addressing often underexplored yet clinically crucial endpoint: post-treatment swallowing function.

The integration of both objective (FEES with penetration-aspiration scale) and subjective (Malay EAT-10 and swallowing capacity scale) assessments strengthens the study design and provides a multidimensional evaluation of dysphagia. Importantly, the finding that HyBIRT was associated with superior swallowing outcomes, particularly in liquid and semisolid boluses, highlights the potential functional advantages of organ-preserving strategies. This observation is consistent with prior evidence demonstrating favorable functional and oncologic outcomes of interstitial brachytherapy in early oral tongue cancers [2] as well as guideline recommendations supporting its role in head and neck malignancies [3]. In an era, where survivorship and quality of life are increasingly emphasized, such data are highly relevant. Furthermore, recent reviews have highlighted the expanding role and technical evolution of brachytherapy in head and neck oncology, reinforcing its clinical value [4].

Nevertheless, several issues merit further discussion. First, the cross-sectional design and relatively small sample size, especially in the HyBIRT cohort, limit the generalizability of conclusions. The shorter follow-up duration in the HyBIRT group may also underestimate late radiation-related toxicities, such as progressive fibrosis, which could affect long-term swallowing outcomes. Given that dose distribution and exposure to critical structures are known to influence toxicity profiles in brachytherapy [5], longer follow-up is essential to fully evaluate functional durability. Second, the surgical...


View full text

Share
without publication fees