Your initial consultation routinely takes place at the St Vincent’s Head and Neck Cancer Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) meeting at The Kinghorn Cancer Centre, 370 Victoria Street, Darlinghurst.
My Nurse Practitioner attends your consultation. She is a second point of contact for you and your family throughout your cancer journey.
A junior medical officer such as the ENT registrar will take your history. Once the head and neck MDT commences you will be examined. You will be examined by a Junior Medical Officer (JMO) or an ENT Registrar (a doctor training to be a specialist) or a senior doctor in the Head and Neck Service. Senior doctors are also known as specialists, consultants or VMOs (Visiting Medical Officer).
After taking a history I may need to examine you with a flexible video telescope. This takes a moving image of the inside of your throat which you can also see on a monitor.
Examination may require the use of a flexible video telescope. This is a minor procedure which provides a magnified, high definition, live action review of your larynx, throat and nose. It is called a video nasolaryngoscopy.
Direct video nasolaryngoscopy is a minor procedure which gives me a magnified, high definition, live action view of your larynx, throat and nose. The great advantage of videoscopes over standard flexible fibreoptic telescopes is that they provide a superior (4K) magnified image on a wide screen. I originally used fibreoptic telescopes in my practice but I changed over to video in 2013. This was because I recognised that the superior image offered by video significantly improves my ability to identify pre-cancerous and cancerous changes in the lining of the throat and voicebox. I pioneered the use of this equipment in Australian consulting rooms and know of only a handful of head and neck and otolaryngology surgeons who use it.
This is the only time video nasolaryngoscopy is used during your treatment. Long-term follow up in the Outpatient Department uses direct fibreoptic endoscopy.
I use video nasendoscopy because I consider it the best way to document your lesion. I compare the still and video images I collect at each consultation in order to monitor your response to treatment. This is important for long term follow up. The majority of head and neck oncologists (surgeons, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists) do not do this.
The video nasolaryngoscopes are individually cleaned and sterilised on-site at the Kinghorn Cancer Centre according to Australian/New Zealand standards. This is performed by appropriately trained sterilisation staff.
All reusable equipment used during your examination is cleaned and sterilised according to
Australian/New Zealand Standard AS/NZS 4815:2006 Office-based health care facilities – Reprocessing of reusable medical and surgical instruments and equipment, and maintenance of the associated environment. We use a steam steriliser, also known as an autoclave, and the
Tristel medical instrument disinfection system. Our
Melag Premium Steam Steriliser meets international sterilisation standards and is validated annually. All practice staff are trained in infection control.