4.6 Article

The Impact of Post-Operative Radiotherapy in Early Stage (pT1-pT2N0M0) Oral Tongue Squamous Cell Carcinoma in Era of DOI

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13194851

Keywords

oral tongue cancer; post-operative radiotherapy; depth of infiltration; perineural invasion

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health
  2. European Institute of Oncology-Cardiologic Center Monzino Foundation (FIEO-CCM)
  3. Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC)
  4. Accuray Inc.
  5. University of Milan, Milan, Italy

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The study concluded that depth of infiltration alone is not sufficient to determine the prognosis of early stage oral cavity tumors, and other risk factors should be considered when deciding on the need for postoperative radiotherapy. Factors such as perineural invasion were found to have a significant impact on relapse and local relapse free survival.
Simple Summary:& nbsp;The aim of the present study was to clarify the role of depth of infiltration (DOI) as an independent prognosticator in early stage (T1-T2N0M0) oral cavity tumors. Moreover, whether patients upstaged to pT3 for DOI > 10 mm need postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) in the absence of other risk factors has not been established yet. The DOI alone was not sufficient to impact the prognosis and therefore other risk factors should be considered to indicate PORT indications in upstaged patients due to DOI > 10 mm. Background: This study investigated the role of depth of infiltration (DOI) as an independent prognosticator in early stage (T1-T2N0M0) oral cavity tumors and to evaluate the need of postoperative radiotherapy in the case of patients upstaged to pT3 for DOI > 10 mm in the absence of other risk factors. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis on patients treated with surgery and re-staged according to the 8th edition of malignant tumors classification (TNM). The role of DOI as well as other clinical/pathological features was investigated at both univariable and multivariable analyses on overall survival (OS), disease free survival (DFS), relapse free survival (RFS), and local RFS. Results: Among the 94 included patients, 23 would have been upstaged to pT3 based on DOI. Multivariable analysis showed that DOI was not an independent prognostic factor for any of the considered outcomes. The presence of perineural invasion was associated with a significant worse RFS (p = 0.02) and LRFS (p = 0.04). PORT was found to be significantly associated with DFS (p = 0.04) and RFS (p = 0.06). Conclusions: The increasing DOI alone was not sufficient to impact the prognosis, and therefore, should not be sufficient to dictate PORT indications in early-stage patients upstaged on the sole basis of DOI.

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