Affiliation:
1. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery University of California, Irvine Orange California USA
2. School of Medicine University of California, San Diego La Jolla California USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveEvaluate the effect of treatment delay on survival in human papillomavirus (HPV)‐positive and HPV‐negative oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) patients undergoing primary surgical resection.Study DesignRetrospective cohort study using the 2010‐2017 National Cancer Database.SettingMulticenter database study.MethodsPatients >18 years old with OPSCC and known HPV status, treated surgically with or without postoperative radiation/chemotherapy were included. Two cohorts based on HPV status were grouped by time to treatment initiation (TD‐TI, ≤30, 31‐60, ≥61 days) and surgery to radiotherapy (TS‐RT, ≤42, 43‐66, ≥67 days). Univariate, Kaplan‐Meier, and multivariate analyses assessed correlations between demographic and clinical factors with overall survival in treatment delay groups.ResultsIncluded were 1643 HPV‐positive OPSCC patients and 391 HPV‐negative OPSCC patients. No associations between survival and gender, age, race, insurance, or radiotherapy length were observed. Regardless of HPV status, larger tumor size (>2 cm) and lymphovascular invasion predicted worse survival. HPV negative patients with >4 lymph nodes involved had 2.5× greater mortality risk (P = .039). Robotic surgery was associated with improved survival only in HPV positive patients (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.41, P < .001). In HPV positive patients, higher TD‐TI related to lower mean survival, although this was not significant on multivariate analysis. HPV negative patients with >42 days of TS‐RT had decreased survival (43‐66 days, HR 1.63, P = .049; ≥67 days, HR 2.10, P = .032).ConclusionLonger TS‐RT was associated with lower overall survival in HPV negative patients. Treatment delay was not associated with survival in HPV positive OPSCC according to multivariate analysis. These findings enhance knowledge about treatment delay effects in OPSCC, aiding providers in decisions and patient communication.
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