| Literature DB >> 29578359 |
Xu Shan Sun1, Cécile Michel2, Emmanuel Babin3, Dominique De Raucourt4, Adeline Péchery1, Elisabeta Gherga1, Bernard Géry5, Carmen Florescu5, Jean Bourhis6, Juliette Thariat5.
Abstract
Median survival for recurrent/metastatic head and neck squamous cell cancer (HNSCC) patients is about 10 months after first-line best systemic treatment. We aimed to assess current approaches of oligometastatic HNSCC patients by the analysis of current concept and published data (1995-2017) in this population. Five-year survival rates are over 20% in selected patients who undergo metastasis-directed therapy by either surgery or stereotactic irradiation. Human papillomavirus(+) HNSCC patients have more disseminated metastases but respond more favorably and also benefit from ablative treatments. Treatments of oligometastases are expanding rapidly. Unmet needs include revised imaging follow-up strategies to detect metastases earlier, identification of predictive noninvasive biomarkers for treatment guidance, assessment and corrections of biases in current studies and randomized clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: ablative treatment; head and neck cancer; immunotherapy; metastasectomy; metastases; metastasis-directed treatment; oligometastases; stereotactic irradiation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29578359 DOI: 10.2217/fon-2017-0468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Future Oncol ISSN: 1479-6694 Impact factor: 3.404