Lee, FranciscoSmith, Kristine AChandarana, ShamirMatthews, T. WBosch, J. DNakoneshny, Steven CDort, Joseph C2018-11-072018-11-072018-05-09Journal of Otolaryngology - Head & Neck Surgery. 2018 May 09;47(1):31http://hdl.handle.net/1880/109089https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/44575Abstract Background Operative endoscopy and flexible fiber-optic in-office tissue biopsy are common techniques to assess suspicious laryngopharyngeal lesions. Methods The primary outcome was the delay to the initiation of treatment. Secondary outcomes were delay to biopsy, histopathological diagnosis, and assessment at a multidisciplinary oncology clinic. A retrospective analysis was performed to assess the relative delays between these approaches to biopsy of laryngopharyngeal lesions. Results There were 114 patients in the study cohort; 44 in-office and 70 operative endoscopic biopsies). The mean delay from consultation to biopsy was 17.4 days for the operative endoscopy group and 1.3 days for the in-office group. The mean delay from initial otolaryngology consultation to initiation of treatment was 51.7 days and 44.6 days for the operative endoscopy and in-office groups, respectively. Conclusion In-office biopsy reduced the time from initial consultation to biopsy. The temporal gains via in-office biopsy did not translate into faster access to treatment. This outcome highlights the opportunity to improve access to treatment for patients with early diagnosis.An evaluation of in-office flexible fiber-optic biopsies for laryngopharyngeal lesionsJournal Article2018-11-07enThe Author(s).https://doi.org/10.1186/s40463-018-0275-x