BACKGROUND: In nasopharyngeal carcinoma, both, a short metastasis-free interval after primary treatment and the occurrence of epidural metastasis have been associated with poor prognosis. We present the clinical course of a young patient with these two conditions and review the literature. PATIENT: A 26-year-old male with stage T2N3M0 non-keratinizing carcinoma (WHO type 2) of the nasopharynx was treated with induction chemotherapy and radical radiotherapy, 6 months after documentation of a clinical complete remission, the patient experienced metastatic disease to the C7-D1 vertebral bodies associated with an epidural soft tissue mass. Since no further metastatic lesions were detectable, the patient was treated with radiotherapy alone (3 960 cGy/22 fractions). RESULTS: Treatment resulted in compete resolution of neurological and radiological signs of the disease and the patient continues to be disease-free, 32 months after salvage treatment. In a literature search, we identified 54 reported cases with long-term survival after treatment for metastatic nasopharyngeal cancer. The vast majority of them had primary tumors with undifferentiated histology and was treated with combination chemotherapy. In 25 of them, radiotherapy was given as consolidation therapy (in 19 cases for bone and in six cases for mediastinal lymph node metastases). CONCLUSIONS: Epidural metastatic disease from a nasopharyngeal carcinoma is highly sensitive to moderate doses of fractionated radiotherapy. MR imaging is essential for the detection of relevant soft tissue disease extensions within the epidural space and proper selection of the radiation target volume in vertebral metastases. In patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma, the occurrence of a solitary epidural metastasis after a short metastasis-free interval is not incompatible with long-term survival.
BACKGROUND: In nasopharyngeal carcinoma, both, a short metastasis-free interval after primary treatment and the occurrence of epidural metastasis have been associated with poor prognosis. We present the clinical course of a young patient with these two conditions and review the literature. PATIENT: A 26-year-old male with stage T2N3M0 non-keratinizing carcinoma (WHO type 2) of the nasopharynx was treated with induction chemotherapy and radical radiotherapy, 6 months after documentation of a clinical complete remission, the patient experienced metastatic disease to the C7-D1 vertebral bodies associated with an epidural soft tissue mass. Since no further metastatic lesions were detectable, the patient was treated with radiotherapy alone (3 960 cGy/22 fractions). RESULTS: Treatment resulted in compete resolution of neurological and radiological signs of the disease and the patient continues to be disease-free, 32 months after salvage treatment. In a literature search, we identified 54 reported cases with long-term survival after treatment for metastatic nasopharyngeal cancer. The vast majority of them had primary tumors with undifferentiated histology and was treated with combination chemotherapy. In 25 of them, radiotherapy was given as consolidation therapy (in 19 cases for bone and in six cases for mediastinal lymph node metastases). CONCLUSIONS: Epidural metastatic disease from a nasopharyngeal carcinoma is highly sensitive to moderate doses of fractionated radiotherapy. MR imaging is essential for the detection of relevant soft tissue disease extensions within the epidural space and proper selection of the radiation target volume in vertebral metastases. In patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma, the occurrence of a solitary epidural metastasis after a short metastasis-free interval is not incompatible with long-term survival.
Authors: G Brandon Gunn; Ruben D Villa; Ross R Sedler; Fred Hardwicke; Gianluigi A Fornari; Rufus J Mark Journal: J Neurooncol Date: 2004-05 Impact factor: 4.130