Impact of Neck Dissection in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinomas of Unknown Primary

Author:

Abu-Shama Yazan,Salleron Julia,Carsuzaa FlorentORCID,Sun Xu-Shan,Pflumio Carole,Troussier Idriss,Petit ClaireORCID,Caubet Matthieu,Beddok ArnaudORCID,Calugaru Valentin,Servagi-Vernat Stephanie,Castelli Joël,Miroir Jessica,Krengli MarcoORCID,Giraud Paul,Romano Edouard,Khalifa Jonathan,Doré Mélanie,Blanchard Nicolas,Coutte Alexandre,Dupin Charles,Sumodhee Shakeel,Tao Yungan,Roth Vincent,Geoffrois Lionel,Toussaint Bruno,Nguyen Duc Trung,Faivre Jean-Christophe,Thariat Juliette

Abstract

Purpose: Management of head and neck cancers of unknown primary (HNCUP) combines neck dissection (ND) and radiotherapy, with or without chemotherapy. The prognostic value of ND has hardly been studied in HNCUP. Methods: A retrospective multicentric study assessed the impact of ND extent (adenectomy, selective ND, radical/radical-modified ND) on nodal relapse, progression-free survival (PFS) or survival, taking into account nodal stage. Results: 53 patients (16.5%) had no ND, 33 (10.2%) had lymphadenectomy, 116 (36.0%) underwent selective ND and 120 underwent radical/radical-modified ND (37.3%), 15 of which received radical ND (4.7%). With a 34-month median follow-up, the 3-year incidence of nodal relapse was 12.5% and progression-free survival (PFS) 69.1%. In multivariate analysis after adjusting for nodal stage, the risk of nodal relapse or progression was reduced with lymphadenectomy, selective or radical/modified ND, but survival rates were similar. Patients undergoing lymphadenectomy or ND had a better PFS and lowered nodal relapse incidence in the N1 + N2a group, but the improvement was not significant for the N2b or N2 + N3c patients. Severe toxicity rates exceeded 40% with radical ND. Conclusion: In HNCUP, ND improves PFS, regardless of nodal stage. The magnitude of the benefit of ND does not appear to depend on ND extent and decreases with a more advanced nodal stage.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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