Clinical Relevance of Resection Margins in Patients with Total Laryngectomy or Laryngopharyngectomy

Author:

Bernard Simone E.1ORCID,van Lanschot Cornelia G. F.1ORCID,Sewnaik Aniel1,de Ridder Maria A. J.2ORCID,Hardillo Jose A.1ORCID,Monserez Dominiek A.1ORCID,Baatenburg de Jong Robert J.1,Koljenović Senada345

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otorhinolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, Erasmus MC Cancer Institute, University Medical Center Rotterdam, P.O. Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Medical Informatics, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, P.O. Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands

3. Department of Pathology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, P.O. Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands

4. Department of Pathology, Antwerp University Hospital, Drie Eikenstraat 655, B-2650 Edegem, Belgium

5. Faculty of Medicine, University of Antwerp, Universiteitsplein 1, B-2610 Antwerpen, Belgium

Abstract

Background: Laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer is complex and resection margins are therefore constrained. The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical relevance of resection margins in laryngeal and hypopharyngeal surgery. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was performed for patients treated with a total laryngectomy (TL) or laryngopharyngectomy (TLP) for laryngeal or hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC and HSCC, respectively). Within the groups primary LSCC, recurrent LSCC, primary HSCC, and recurrent HSCC the relationship between the status of the resection margin according to the Royal Collage of Pathology and the recurrence and survival rates were investigated. Results: Positive resection margins were found in 54% for primary LSCC, 29% for recurrent LSCC, 62% for primary HSCC, and 44% for recurrent HSCC. For primary and recurrent LSCC, there was a linear association between total recurrence and narrowing margins (p = 0.007 resp. p = 0.008). Multivariate survival analysis for primary and recurrent LSCC showed a significantly worse disease free and disease-specific survival in case of positive margins compared to clear margins. Conclusion: Similar survival rates were recorded for close and clear margins for primary and recurrent LSCC. This may suggest that a margin > 5 mm is not clinically relevant in terms of survival. Therefore, a margin of 1–5 mm should be accepted in certain subsites. Margins < 1 mm are related to significantly worse outcomes and should be avoided.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference20 articles.

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2. Salvage surgery for advanced stage head and neck squamous cell carcinoma following radiotherapy or chemoradiation;Elbers;Eur. Arch. Otorhinolaryngol.,2019

3. Helliwell, T., Woolgar, J., and The Royal College of Pathology (2023, February 01). Standards and Datasets for Reporting Cancers. Dataset for Histopathology Reporting of Mucosal Malignancies of the Larynx. November 2013. Available online: https://www.rcpath.org/static/0d6c0512-e285-40fd-b8a9ee31b13887de/Dataset-for-histopathology-reporting-of-mucosal-malignancies-of-the-larynx.pdf.

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