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Clinical study of poorly differentiated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma: a prospective cohort study in China.

AbstractBackground:
Although poorly differentiated is rare in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), its prognosis are worse with high rate of local recurrence and distant metastasis (DS). Therefore, this study hopes to carry out prospective clinical research on different treatment options for poorly differentiated patients and explore the treatment scheme more suitable for these patients.
Methods:
This study is a prospective cohort study. We selected patients with poorly differentiated carcinoma in larynx or hypopharynx (stage I-IV, T1-4a, N0-2, M0). The intervention treatment methods for stage I-II patients are as follows: surgery, induction chemotherapy (IC) + surgery, surgery + adjuvant therapy; The intervention treatment methods for stage III-IV patients are as follows: surgery, IC + surgery + adjuvant therapy, surgery + adjuvant therapy. The patients were followed up for at least 1 year, and the disease progression and survival were counted.
Results:
From September 2016 to October 2020, 62 patients were included (29 patients in stage I/II and 33 patients in stage III/IV). We found that there was no significant difference in survival between treatment groups in stage I/II patients [overall survival (OS): P=0.447; progression free survival (PFS): P=0.504], but the surgery + adjuvant treatment group had a significant advantage in 3-year OS (100%). In stage III/IV patients, there were significant differences in DS, OS and PFS between different treatment groups (DS: P=0.013; OS: P=0.021; PFS: P=0.020). Among them, the survival rate of IC + surgery + adjuvant treatment group was the best, with 3-year OS of 78%.
Conclusions:
Our study found that postoperative radiotherapy may improve the OS rate of patients with early (stage I/II) poorly differentiated HNSCC; For advanced patients (stage III/IV), surgery combined with IC and postoperative adjuvant radiotherapy may better control DS and improve the survival rate. However, our study draws the above conclusions based on small sample data, and we will continue to summarize and expand the sample size for verification.
AuthorsShuo Ding, Wei Guo, Gaofei Yin, Nuan Li, Hongfei Liu, Junwei Huang, Zheng Yang, Hongbo Xu, Xiaohong Chen, Yang Zhang, Zhigang Huang
JournalAnnals of translational medicine (Ann Transl Med) Vol. 10 Issue 12 Pg. 703 (Jun 2022) ISSN: 2305-5839 [Print] China
PMID35845503 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
Copyright2022 Annals of Translational Medicine. All rights reserved.

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