4.7 Article

Extracapsular spread and adjuvant therapy in human papillomavirus-related, p16-positive oropharyngeal carcinoma

Journal

CANCER
Volume 118, Issue 14, Pages 3519-3530

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.26671

Keywords

extracapsular spread; oropharyngeal cancer; human papillomavirus; p16 protein; adjuvant therapy; lymphatic metastasis

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Funding

  1. Kathryn Trinkaus of the Biostatistics Core, Siteman Comprehensive Cancer Center

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BACKGROUND: Extracapsular spread (ECS) is commonly used to justify adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with head and neck cancer. The role of ECS as a prognosticator and adjuvant therapy determinant in surgically resected, human papillomavirus-related oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC), however, has never been determined. METHODS: Of 210 oropharynx patients in a prospective transoral laser microsurgery database, 152 patients who had p16-positive primary OPSCC and pathologically positive necks were eligible for the study. ECS was measured from routine reporting (ECSreport) and by using a novel histologic grading system (ECSgraded). Proportional hazards models and matched analyses were used to compare the impact of ECS and adjuvant therapy on disease-free survival (DFS). Patients with and without graded ECS were matched for T-stage, surgical margins, and adjuvant therapy. RESULTS: At a median follow-up of 43 months, the presence of ECS was not associated with poorer DFS in multivariate analyses (ECSreport: hazard ratio [HR], 3.42; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.45-25.88; P = .23; ECSgraded: HR, 2.54; 95% CI, 0.88-7.34; P = .09). T-stage and high-grade ECS, ie soft tissue metastasis (STMgraded) were prognostic. Overall and in the presence of ECS or even STM, adjuvant CRT was not associated with better DFS over radiotherapy alone (HR, 0.25; 95% CI, 0.06-1.13; P = .07). In addition, matched analyses demonstrated no significant reduction in DFS for the presence of ECS versus the absence of ECS or reduced DFS for the administration of adjuvant radiotherapy alone versus CRT in ECS-positive patients. CONCLUSIONS: Routinely reported ECS was not prognostic in this study. Adjuvant CRT versus radiotherapy alone produced no improvement in DFS for ECS-positive patients. The authors propose that de-escalated adjuvant therapy should be considered for patients with p16-positive OPSCC who undergo surgery and that routinely reported ECS should not be used to justify adjuvant chemotherapy. Cancer 2012;35193530. (C) 2011 American Cancer Society.

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