OBJECTIVE: To examine outcomes among patients treated for sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) of the head and neck. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review. METHODS: The records of 16 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed, non-metastatic SNUC were analyzed. Initial treatment consisted of: surgery alone (6 patients), surgery with post-operative chemoradiotherapy (4 patients), and primary radiation therapy with concurrent chemotherapy (6 patients). RESULTS: The median survival for patients treated by surgery followed by postoperative chemoradiotherapy was 30 months compared to 7 months and 9 months for patients treated by surgery alone and upfront chemoradiotherapy, respectively (p=0.20). The 2-year locoregional control was 18% for patients treated with upfront chemoradiotherapy, 37% for patients treated with surgery alone, and 78% for patients treated with surgery plus chemoradiotherapy (p=0.49). CONCLUSION: While the potential role of selection bias must be considered, multi-modality therapy using surgery and post-operative chemoradiotherapy yielded the most favorable outcomes for SNUC and should be recommended whenever feasible.
OBJECTIVE: To examine outcomes among patients treated for sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) of the head and neck. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review. METHODS: The records of 16 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed, non-metastatic SNUC were analyzed. Initial treatment consisted of: surgery alone (6 patients), surgery with post-operative chemoradiotherapy (4 patients), and primary radiation therapy with concurrent chemotherapy (6 patients). RESULTS: The median survival for patients treated by surgery followed by postoperative chemoradiotherapy was 30 months compared to 7 months and 9 months for patients treated by surgery alone and upfront chemoradiotherapy, respectively (p=0.20). The 2-year locoregional control was 18% for patients treated with upfront chemoradiotherapy, 37% for patients treated with surgery alone, and 78% for patients treated with surgery plus chemoradiotherapy (p=0.49). CONCLUSION: While the potential role of selection bias must be considered, multi-modality therapy using surgery and post-operative chemoradiotherapy yielded the most favorable outcomes for SNUC and should be recommended whenever feasible.
Authors: Alan D Workman; Robert M Brody; Edward C Kuan; Esther Baranov; Steven G Brooks; Michelle Alonso-Basanta; Jason G Newman; Christopher H Rassekh; Ara A Chalian; Alexander G Chiu; Gregory S Weinstein; Michael D Feldman; Nithin D Adappa; Bert W O'Malley; James N Palmer Journal: J Neurol Surg B Skull Base Date: 2018-08-16
Authors: Muhammad Faisal; Rudolf Seemann; Claudia Lill; Sasan Hamzavi; Arno Wutzl; Boban M Erovic; Stefan Janik Journal: Head Neck Date: 2020-01-10 Impact factor: 3.147