4.2 Review

Systemic therapy for salivary gland malignancy: current status and future perspectives

Journal

JAPANESE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 4, Pages 293-302

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jjco/hyac008

Keywords

salivary gland malignancy; chemotherapy; personalized therapy; immunotherapy

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Salivary gland malignancies are rare tumors with diverse histological and biological features. The application of systemic therapy in the treatment of salivary gland malignancies remains challenging, and there is currently no defined treatment advantage. Personalized therapies have been widely accepted, but a multidisciplinary approach is necessary to consider both patient needs and tumor characteristics.
Salivary gland malignancies are rare neoplasms that have a broad histological spectrum and a variety of biologic behaviors. Salivary gland malignancies are known as chemo-resistant tumors, which render optimal treatment challenging. This review summarizes the role of systemic therapy for salivary gland malignancies. To date, the advantage of adding concurrent chemotherapy has remained undefined for both postoperative and inoperable locally advanced salivary gland malignancy patients undergoing radiotherapy. For recurrent/metastatic disease, local and/or systemic treatment options should be discussed in a multidisciplinary setting with consideration to both patient needs and tumor factors. For symptomatic patients or those who may compromise organ function, palliative systemic therapy can be a reasonable option based on the results of phase II studies. Platinum combination regimens as first-line therapy have been widely accepted. Personalized therapies have become established options, particularly for androgen receptor-positive, HER2-positive and NTRK fusion-positive salivary gland malignancies (i.e. androgen receptor and HER2 in salivary duct carcinoma and NTRK3 in secretory carcinoma). For patients with adenoid cystic carcinoma, multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors have also been developed. Anti-PD1 checkpoint inhibitors have shown limited activity to date. Investigation of active systemic treatments for salivary gland malignancy remains a significant unmet need. Future directions might include a more comprehensive genomic screening approach (usually next-generation sequencing-based) and combination strategies using immune checkpoint inhibitors. These are rare malignancies that require ongoing effort in the conduct of high-quality clinical trials.

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