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Title: Tumor regression and other prognosticators in advanced head and neck cancers: a sequel to the RTOG methotrexate study

Journal Article · · Int. J. Radiat. Oncol., Biol. Phys.; (United States)
 [1]; ;
  1. Thomas Jefferson Univ. Hospital, Philadelphia, PA

The randomized Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) Methotrexate trial in advanced squamous cancers of the head and neck has reported no control or survival benefits when the chemotherapy adjuvant was administered to patients just prior to definitive irradiation. The required data collection and outcome reporting among 146 patients bearing oral cavity primaries and 354 patients with oropharyngeal cancers has allowed a multi-variate approach seeking answers to many unresolved questions. As anticipated, the ability to control these squamous cancers is largely a function of size (T and N stage) with a superior clearance among T3-4 primaries of the oropharynx (66%) contrasted to identically staged oral cavity tumors (48%). Lymph node deposits also impact upon survival, especially among oropharynx patients where the 17.6 month adjusted median survival among N0 patients declines to 11.0 months when the primaries are associated with N3 nodes. Finally, the association of T and N-stage upon distant metastases was investigated, with the surprising conclusion that neither initial T nor N-stage exerts any apparent influence on the observed 10 to 12% occurrence. The interrelationship of these various prognostic variables is explored using the Cox and logistic models.

OSTI ID:
5747845
Journal Information:
Int. J. Radiat. Oncol., Biol. Phys.; (United States), Vol. 9:7
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English