Literature DB >> 29970111

Postoperative (chemo) radiation in patients with squamous cell cancers of the head and neck - clinical results from the cohort of the clinical cooperation group "Personalized Radiotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer".

Cornelius Maihoefer1,2, Lars Schüttrumpf3,4, Corinna Macht5, Ulrike Pflugradt3,4, Julia Hess3,6, Ludmila Schneider3,6, Christine Woischke3,7, Axel Walch8, Philipp Baumeister3,9, Thomas Kirchner3,7, Horst Zitzelsberger3,6, Claus Belka3,4, Ute Ganswindt3,4,10.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Postoperative (chemo) radiation improves tumor control and survival in high-risk patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma based on established risk factors. The clinical cooperation group "Personalized Radiotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer" focuses on the identification and validation of new biomarkers, which are aimed at eventually stratifying and personalizing the therapy concept. Hence, we reviewed all patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx, or larynx, treated with postoperative (chemo) radiation from 06/2008 until 06/2015 at the Department of Radiation Oncology in the University Hospital, LMU Munich. Here we report the clinical results of the cohort, laying the foundation for further research within the framework of a clinical cooperation group.
METHODS: Patient data were retrospectively (until 2013) and prospectively (from 2013) collected and analyzed for outcome and treatment failures with regard to previously described and established risk factors.
RESULTS: We identified 302 patients (median follow-up 45 months, average age 60.7 years), having received postoperative (chemo)radiation (median 64 Gy). Chemotherapy was added in 58% of cases, mostly Cisplatin/5- Fluorouracil in concordance with the ARO 96-3 study. The 3-year overall survival, local, locoregional and distant failure estimates were 70.5, 9.7, 12.2 and 13.5%, respectively. Human papillomavirus-associated oropharyngeal cancer was associated with a significant improved overall survival, locoregional, distant and overall tumor control rates in multivariate analysis. Additionally, in multivariate analysis, for local failure, resection status and perineural invasion, for locoregional and distant failure extracapsular extension and for overall survival the presence of nodal disease were significant adverse factors. Moreover, 138 patients have been treated in concordance with the ARO 96-3 protocol, corroborating the results of this study.
CONCLUSIONS: Our cohort represents a large unselected cohort of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma treated with postoperative (chemo)radiation. Tumor control rates and survival rates are consistent with the results of previously reported data.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adjuvant; Chemoradiation; HNSCC; HPV; Head and neck cancer; Postoperative; Radiation therapy; Radiotherapy; Squamous cell carcinoma

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29970111      PMCID: PMC6029020          DOI: 10.1186/s13014-018-1067-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Oncol        ISSN: 1748-717X            Impact factor:   3.481


Background

Postoperative (chemo)radiation is the standard treatment for patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) presenting with established risk factors such as large primary tumors, positive nodal involvement, and close or incomplete resection margins after surgery [1-7]. Since the joint analysis by Cooper and Bernier, close or incomplete resection margins or lymph nodes with extracapsular spread are established risk factors for the indication of additional chemotherapy [8, 9]. However, the prognosis of patients with HNSCC is still to be improved [10, 11]. At the same time, Human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated oropharyngeal carcinoma (HPVOPC) have a much better outcome than HPV-negative HNSCC [12-15]. Due to rigid inclusion and exclusion criteria, most studies do not represent the usual “everyday” patient. Here we describe an unselected cohort of patients that have been treated with postoperative (chemo)radiation in our department. This cohort (LMU-KKG) lays the foundation for ongoing and future research such as the establishment of new biomarkers and the personalization of head and neck oncology in the context of the multidisciplinary translational Clinical Cooperation Group (CCG; german: KKG) “Personalized Radiotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer”.

Methods

We analyzed 302 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx and larynx who have been treated with postoperative radiation therapy in our clinic (Department of Radiation Oncology, University Hospital, LMU Munich) between 06/2008 and 06/2015 retrospectively (until 2013) and prospectively (from 2013). From 2013 onwards, the data acquisition was conducted prospectively within the framework of the clinical cooperation group “Personalized Radiotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer”. Patients aged at least 18 years with the aforementioned tumor sites and histology were included. Basically, all patients with HNSCC were permitted in the prospective collection cohort, but only those with surgery followed by adjuvant (chemo)radiation were included in this analysis. Patients with risk factors such as large primary tumors (pT3/pT4), positive nodal involvement (≥pN1), close (< 5 mm), incomplete resection margins or in some cases previously not irradiated recurrent tumors were treated with postoperative radiation therapy. The advised dose was usually 64–66 Gy to the former tumor bed, 50–54 Gy to the elective nodal levels and 56–60 Gy to involved nodal levels; both 3D- and IMRT-technique (intensity-modulated radiotherapy) have been used. In cases of close or incomplete resection margins or lymph nodes with extracapsular extension (ECE) patients underwent additional chemotherapy, consisting of Cisplatin/5-Fluorouracil (CDDP/5-FU) in concordance with the ARO 96–3 Study (CDDP (20 mg/m2 on day 1–5, 29–33) and 5-FU (600 mg/m2 on day 1–5, 29–33) [9]. The reasons for selecting this regimen were positive treatment experiences during the participation in the study and the promising results presented at the ASCO-Meeting in 2009. However, in 2016 this regimen was discontinued in favor of CDDP mono, as no published solid long-term data further supported the CDDP/5-FU approach. Other chemotherapeutic regimens (such as CDDP 40 mg/m2 weekly, Mitomycin C (MMC) 10 mg/m2 d1,d29; 5-FU 600 mg/m2 d1–5, MMC 10 mg/m2 d5,d36 or Cetuximab 250 mg/m2 weekly with 400 mg/m2 loading dose) were used if a patient with clear indication for chemoradiation was not suitable for combined CCDP and 5-FU-based chemotherapy due to relevant comorbidities or advanced age (e.g. in case of decreased renal function 5-FU/MMC, in case of cardiac comorbidities CDDP only or in case of advanced age and reduced performance status switch to MMC or Cetuximab mono). The clinic’s radiation therapy management system (Mosaiq® - Elekta, Sweden) and patient files recorded in a dedicated Microsoft® Access® Relational Database were used to collect patient data. Tumor stage was assessed using the UICC 7th edition classification, for HPVOPC also UICC 8th edition stages were added. Resection margins were considered “close margin” when declared R0, but less than 5 mm by the local pathologist. Other risk factors were recurrent disease, lymphovascular invasion (LVI), venous tumor invasion (VTI), perineural invasion (PNI), extracapsular extension (ECE) and number of involved lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical (IHC) p16INK4a staining results from our local pathology was used as a surrogate marker for HPV-infection, if available (162 patients). Additionally, 124 of the remaining HNSCC patients were analyzed for HPV p16 within the framework of the KKG. IHC p16INK4a staining was performed using the CINtec TM Histology Kit (Roche mtm laboratories AG, Heidelberg, Germany) on a Ventana Benchmark LT automated immunostainer (Ventana Medical Systems, Tucson AZ, USA) according to the protocol. Tumor specimens with strong and diffuse nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in more than 70% of tumor cells were considered as p16-positive. Follow-up data has been gathered in the joint survivorship clinic of the Otorhinolaryngological and the Radiation Oncology Department of the LMU, but also from follow-up visits in our clinic, medical records from external care givers or by telephone (for assessing the survival only). Follow-up has been calculated from the first day of radiation therapy with the reverse Kaplan-Meier estimate [16]. All other endpoints such as survival or time to recurrence have been calculated from the first day of the radiation treatment. The events of the survival endpoints were defined as following: overall survival (OS) – death, disease-free survival (DFS) – death or any recurrence, disease-specific survival (DSS) – only death related to recurring HNSCC. P-values were determined using log-rank testing for comparison between groups. Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted using Cox proportional hazard regression models. If more than one factor was significant in univariate Cox regression analysis, multivariate Cox regression analysis with backward elimination (likelihood ratio) was used for determining the influence of multiple covariates. If possible by the number of events, factors with p < 0.1 were also included in multivariate analysis. Statistical analyses were performed with SPSS V24 (IBM, Chicago, IL) and R (Version 3.3.1). P-values of < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Median estimates and Hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were determined. Ethics approval for data gathering and the assessment of tumor probes were granted by the local ethics committee (No. 448–13, 459–13, 17–116).

Results

Patient and treatment characteristics

A total of 302 patients with HNSCC of the oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx and larynx were treated with adjuvant (chemo)radiation therapy in our department between 06/2008 and 06/2015. Patient, tumor and treatment characteristics are shown in Table 1. The patients’ average age was 60.7 (range 20–87 yr., IQR 54–68 yr) at time of diagnosis. The median follow-up estimate was 45.0 months (95% CI 41.2–48.8 months, reverse Kaplan-Meier). 97% of patients completed radiation therapy and received at least 60 Gy to the tumor bed. 58% of patients (n = 176) received concurrent systemic therapy.
Table 1

Patient and treatment characteristics for all patients (left panel) recurrent patients (middle-left panel) and the ARO-analogue subgroup (middle-right panel) and patients with HPV-p16 positive oropharyngeal carcinoma (right panel)

FactorsAll patientsn = 302Recurrentn = 24ARO-analoguen = 138HPVOPCn = 60
NumberPercentNumberPercentNumberPercentNumberPercent
Primary Tumor
 Oropharynx14949.3416.77655.160100.0
 Oral cavity6320.9625.02014.500.0
 Hypopharynx3912.9312.52417.400.0
 Larynx5116.91145.81813.000.0
Sex
 male22674.81875.010878.34066.7
 female7625.2625.03021.72033.3
Age
 < 45113.60053.658.3
 45–546621.9520.83626.1610.0
 55–6411437.7729.26345.72440.0
 65–748829.1937.53223.21931.7
 > 75237.6312.521.4610.0
UICC Stage 7th edition (a 8th edition for HPVOPC)
 I72.3416.700.01 (42a)1.7 (70.0a)
 II309.90053.64 (16a)6.7 (26.7a)
 III7825.8729.22316.711 (2a)18.3 (3.3a)
 IV18761.91354.211079.744 (0a)73.3 (0.0a)
Diagnosis class
 First diagnosis27290.10012590.65998.3
 Recurrence247.924100.0118.011.7
 Second primary62.00021.400
T-Stage
 T020.728.321.400.0
 T15618.5625.02820.31220.0
 T212140.114.24431.93660.0
 T37424.5625.04029.01016.7
 T44916.2937.52417.423.3
N-Stage
 N08929.51250.01913.8813.3
 N15819.2625.02316.7915
 N2a237.6001510.91016.7
 N2b8528.1520.84734.12541.7
 N2c4213.914.23021.7813.3
 N351.70042.900
M-Stage
 M03021002410013810060100
 M100000000
Resection status (R-Status)
 R015051.0733.34735.12644.1
 R0-Close margin7525.5733.34332.11220.3
 R16923.5733.34432.82135.6
 N/A8341
Extracapsular extension (ECE)
 no (N0)8929.81252.51913.9813.3
 no (N+)13244.1626.15943.13456.7
 yes7826.1521.75943.11830.0
 N/A3110
Perineural invasion (PNI)
 no (Pn0)19883.5888.98682.74187.2
 yes (Pn1)3916.5111.11817.3612.8
 N/A65153413
Lymphatic Invasion (LI)
 no (L0)20173.41178.68266.14069.0
 yes (L1)7326.6321.44233.91831.0
 N/A2810142
Vascular Invasion (VI)
 no (V0)26697.11210011996.05596.5
 yes (V1)82.90054.023.5
 N/A2812143
Grading
 G193.028.721.500.0
 G211939.51147.84532.81118.3
 G317357.51043.49065.74981.7
 N/A1110
HPV p16
 negative15968.21173.36661.700.0
 positive7431.8426.74138.860100.0
 HPVOPC6020.516.73625.260100.0
 N/A699310
RT dose in tumor bed
 < 60 Gy (not completed)9328.342.923.3
 60–63.9 Gy82.60064.335.0
 64 Gy26387.12187.5120875286.7
 66 Gy227.314.284.835.0
RT technique
 3d-conformal24581.12187.511684.14168.3
 IMRT5718.9312.52215.91931.7
Concomitant chemotherapy
 no Chx12641.71041.700.01626.7
  despite indicated4314.2520.800.046.7
   Med.20400.023.3
   Pat. Refusal23100.023.3
  Any Chemo17658.31458.3138100.04473.3
   CDDP/5-FU13878.41145.8138100.03681.8
   CDDP mono95.114.200.036.8
   Cetuximab10.60000.000.0
   5-FU/MMC84.514.200.036.8
   MMC2011.414.200.024.5
  Chemo completed14783.51458.312087.03681.8
  Chemo stopped2916.501813.0818.1
   patient refused8062
  Worsening condition7033
   cytopenia9041
   reaction to chemo5052
Death causes
 Tumor-related423211
 comorbidities403136
 therapy-associated2001
 Second primary8040
 other5030

aThe UICC 8th edition stage is shown in parenthesis (HPVOPC only)

Patient and treatment characteristics for all patients (left panel) recurrent patients (middle-left panel) and the ARO-analogue subgroup (middle-right panel) and patients with HPV-p16 positive oropharyngeal carcinoma (right panel) aThe UICC 8th edition stage is shown in parenthesis (HPVOPC only)

Tumor control rates and survival data for all patients

For all patients 3 (5) year overall survival estimates were 70.5% (60.2%). The estimated disease-specific and disease-free survival rates were 85.7 and 64.7% after 3 years, respectively (Fig. 1a). The estimated 3-year failure rates were 9.7% for local, 12.2% for locoregional, 13.5% for distant and 20.8% for overall failures (Fig. 1b).
Fig. 1

Kaplan-Meier plots a Overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS) and disease-specific survival (DSS) of all patients b local, locoregional, distant and any failure rates of all patients. c overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS) and disease-specific survival (DSS) of the ARO-analogue subgroup d local, locoregional, distant and any failure rates of the ARO-analogue subgroup. Follow-up time was clipped at 60 months. Patients at risk are displayed under the respective plots. Censors are represented by crosses. P-Values (Log Rank) are shown

Kaplan-Meier plots a Overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS) and disease-specific survival (DSS) of all patients b local, locoregional, distant and any failure rates of all patients. c overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS) and disease-specific survival (DSS) of the ARO-analogue subgroup d local, locoregional, distant and any failure rates of the ARO-analogue subgroup. Follow-up time was clipped at 60 months. Patients at risk are displayed under the respective plots. Censors are represented by crosses. P-Values (Log Rank) are shown

Tumor control rates and survival data for patients treated for recurrent tumors

Patients with tumor recurrence after surgery have also been treated in the reported timeframe (n = 24; see Table 1). For patients treated due to recurrent disease 3(5)-year overall survival estimates were 74.6% (65.3%) in comparison to those not treated for recurrence with 69.6% (59.7%) (not significant; n.s.). The estimated 3-year disease-specific (disease-free) survival rates were 85.3% (67.4%) for the patients treated for recurrence and 85.0% (64.5%) for the patients treated for the first manifestation of the tumor (n.s.). The estimated 3-year failure rates were 15.8% for locoregional, 7.7% for distant and 22.8% for overall failures in the recurrent cohort and 11.9, 14.0 and 20.3% in the non-recurrent cohort (n.s.).

Tumor control rates and survival data for the ARO 96–3 subgroup

One hundred thirty-eight patients were treated with CDDP/5-FU in concordance to the chemotherapy arm of the ARO 96–3 study, the patient’s characteristics are described in Table 1. The estimated median follow-up was 45 months (95% CI 40.5–49.5 month). 87% of patients received 2 cycles of chemotherapy; the remaining patients did not receive both cycles due to various reasons (refusal, worsening condition). The estimated 5-year OS, DFS and DSS were 60.6, 56.8 and 76.8%, respectively (Fig. 1c). The estimated 3-year local, locoregional and distant failure rates were 7.8, 10.9 and 18.9%, respectively (Fig. 1d). HPV-p16-status was associated with a significantly improved locoregional control, distant control, DFS, DSS and OS in the ARO-analogue group (data not shown).

Risk factors

Previously described risk factors, such as large primary tumors (pT3 or pT4) the presence of positive lymph nodes with and without extranodal disease (ECE), positive resection margins (R1), lymphangiosis (LVI), perineural invasion (PNI) and positive prognostic factors such as HPV-p16-positive oropharyngeal carcinoma (HPVOPC) were analyzed for correlation with local control, locoregional control, distant control, any control, overall survival (OS), disease-specific survival (DSS) and disease-free survival (DFS) in univariate and multivariate cox regression analysis (see Table 2, Fig. 2a-d).
Table 2

UnivariateMultivariate
HR95% CIp-ValueHR95% CIp-Value
Local failure (LF)
 HPVOPC0.1280.017-0.9450.044*a0.1460.019-1.1150.064
 ≥T31.5800.731-3.4130.244---
 ECE vs N+ b2.8491.014-8.0070.047*a2.262d0.711-7.1990.167
 N+ vs N0 b0.3500.129-0.9460.039*a0.555d0.173-1.7790.322
 pos. Marginsc2.7301.016-7.3330.046*a3.3541.206-9.3290.020*a
 LVI1.6600.696-3.9620.253---
 PNI2.8531.137-7.1540.025*a2.5901.014-6.6160.047*a
 Rec. Tumor1.7300.519-5.7610.372---
Locoreginal failure (LRF)
 HPVOPC0.2080.050-0.8680.031*a0.2100.049-0.8940.035*a
 ≥T31.4700.742-2.9120.270---
 ECE vs N+2.8551.167-6.9850.022*a2.9391.155-7.4730.024*a
 N+ vs N00.3980.165-0.9600.040*a0.4680.167-1.3120.149
 pos. margins1.6100.781-3.3170.197---
 LVI2.0630.984-4.3230.0552.2140.967-5.0670.060
 PNI1.8440.779-4.3630.164---
 Rec. Tumor1.3090.399-4.2890.657---
Distant failure (DF)
 HPVOPC0.2670.082-0.8700.028*a0.1530.036-0.6440.010*a
 ≥T31.5730.838-2.8500.158---
 ECE vs N+3.4081.621-7.1640.001*a3.1091.369-7.0350.007*a
 N+ vs N00.8120.336-1.9570.6420.7590.287-2.0040.578
 pos. margins0.7740.411-1.4580.428---
 LVI1.9470.995-9.8100.0521.9630.932-4.1370.076
 PNI1.4630.634-3.3720.372---
 Rec. Tumor0.3190.044-2.3240.259---
Any failure (AF)
 HPVOPC0.2320.084-0.6430.005*a0.1610.050-0.5230.002*a
 ≥T31.6290.973-2.7280.0641.476d0.822-2.6480.192
 ECE vs N+3.1261.668-5.858<0.001*a3.1131.566-6.1870.001*a
 N+ vs N00.6040.305-1.1950.148*a0.6690.302-1.4840.323
 pos. margins1.0180.603-1.7190.947---
 LVI1.9431.107-3.4120.021*a1.9961.071-3.7200.030*a
 PNI1.6090.820-3.1550.166---
 Rec. Tumor0.9490.344-2.6220.920---
Overall survival (OS)
 HPVOPC0.2770.134-0.5730.001*a0.2540.116-0.5570.001*a
 ≥T31.3850.926-2.0720.113---
 ECE vs N+1.6841.065-2.6630.027*a1.3930.834-2.3270.205
 N+ vs N01.1270.675-1.8830.6471.9841.091-3.6100.025*a
 pos. margins0.7450.497-1.1160.154---
 LVI1.2840.799-2.0640.302---
 PNI1.6660.995-2.7900.0521.462d0.853-2.5060.167
 Rec. Tumor0.8160.357-1.8640.630---
Disease specific survival (DSS)
 HPVOPC0.0760.010-0.5570.011*a0.0790.011-0.5760.012*a
 ≥T31.8391.003-3.3730.049*a1.7190.910-3.2500.095
 ECE vs N+2.8371.366-5.8920.005*a2.1601.021-4.5710.044*a
 N+ s N00.6680.300-1.4860.3221.0930.484-2.4630.831
 pos. margins0.5220.220-1.2390.140---
 LVI1.6280.832-3.1870.155---
 PNI1.7910.842-3.8120.130---
 Rec. Tumor0.9650.298-3.1240.953---
Disease free survival (DFS)
 HPVOPC0.3000.156-0.575<0.001*a0.2940.146-0.5900.001*a
 ≥T31.4631.005-2.1300.047*a1.369d0.873-2.1460.171
 ECE vs N+2.0031.305-3.0770.001*a1.8761.159-3.0350.010*a
 N+ vs N01.0010.618-1.6210.9971.6840.949-2.9850.075
 pos. margins1.1910.778-1.8240.420---
 LVI1.5120.985-2.3220.0591.170d0.718-1.9060.528
 PNI1.6040.984-2.6130.0581.236d0.733-2.0810.427
 Rec. Tumor0.8540.397-1.8360.685---

aP-values < 0.05 were marked with asterisk

bNodal positive patients with ECE have been compared against nodal positive patients without ECE (ECE vs N+) and nodal positive patients without ECE against patients without nodal disease (N+ vs N0) to calculate the excess risk of ECE to nodal disease only

cClose margin vs R0 was neither significant in univariate (HR = 2.200, p = 0.128), nor in multivariate (HR 1.113, p = 0.865) Factors eliminated during the backward-selection are shown for the sake of completeness in grey letters in multivariate analysis

dFactors eliminated during the backward-selection are shown for the sake of completeness in multivariate analysis

Fig. 2

Exemplary Kaplan-Meier plots for risk factors that are significant for recurrence in multivariate analysis. a Local recurrence and resection status (R1 vs R0) b Local recurrence and perineural invasion (Pn1 vs Pn0) c any recurrence and extracapsular extension (ECE vs no ECE/N0) d any recurrence and lymphovascular invasion (L1 vs L0). P-values (log rank) of the Kaplan-Meier estimates are shown. Follow-up time was clipped at 36 months. Patients at risk are displayed under the respective plots. Censors are represented by crosses

aP-values < 0.05 were marked with asterisk bNodal positive patients with ECE have been compared against nodal positive patients without ECE (ECE vs N+) and nodal positive patients without ECE against patients without nodal disease (N+ vs N0) to calculate the excess risk of ECE to nodal disease only cClose margin vs R0 was neither significant in univariate (HR = 2.200, p = 0.128), nor in multivariate (HR 1.113, p = 0.865) Factors eliminated during the backward-selection are shown for the sake of completeness in grey letters in multivariate analysis dFactors eliminated during the backward-selection are shown for the sake of completeness in multivariate analysis Exemplary Kaplan-Meier plots for risk factors that are significant for recurrence in multivariate analysis. a Local recurrence and resection status (R1 vs R0) b Local recurrence and perineural invasion (Pn1 vs Pn0) c any recurrence and extracapsular extension (ECE vs no ECE/N0) d any recurrence and lymphovascular invasion (L1 vs L0). P-values (log rank) of the Kaplan-Meier estimates are shown. Follow-up time was clipped at 36 months. Patients at risk are displayed under the respective plots. Censors are represented by crosses

HPV- p16 positive oropharyngeal carcinoma

Patients with HPV-p16 positive oropharyngeal carcinoma (HPVOPC) have been analyzed separately (n = 60, estimated median follow-up 45 months). With only one local, one regional and three distant recurrences in 4 patients, the 3-year local, locoregional, distant and overall failure estimates (1.8, 4.2, 4.6 and 6.2%) were significantly lower in patients with HPVOPC compared to all other non HPVOPC (13.3, 15.9, 16.8 and 26.5%) (Fig. 3a-d). The 3-year OS, DSS and DFS rates of HPVOPC were significantly better with 88.6, 97.5 and 85.1% compared to 63.7, 81.6 and 56.4% of all other non HPVOPC. Also, when comparing only within the subgroup of OPC (n = 65), OS, DFS, DSS and the overall recurrence rate, were significantly better in HPVpos OPC then in HPV neg OPC (3-year estimates: 60.2, 58.5, 83.4 and 20.8%) (Fig. 3e+f).
Fig. 3

Kaplan-Meier plots for patients with HPV-p16-positive oropharyngeal cancer (HPVOPC, blue line) vs all other Patients (non HPVOPC, green line) HPV-p16 negative oropharyngeal cancer (HPVneg OPC, red dotted line) are shown as reference for oropharyngeal cancer. a local recurrence b locoregional recurrence (loc.reg.) c distant recurrence d any recurrence e overall survival (OS) and f disease-specific survival (DSS); the plot for disease-free survival (DFS) is not shown (p < 0.001). Follow-up time was clipped at 36 months. Patients at risk are displayed under the respective plots. Censors are represented by crosses

Kaplan-Meier plots for patients with HPV-p16-positive oropharyngeal cancer (HPVOPC, blue line) vs all other Patients (non HPVOPC, green line) HPV-p16 negative oropharyngeal cancer (HPVneg OPC, red dotted line) are shown as reference for oropharyngeal cancer. a local recurrence b locoregional recurrence (loc.reg.) c distant recurrence d any recurrence e overall survival (OS) and f disease-specific survival (DSS); the plot for disease-free survival (DFS) is not shown (p < 0.001). Follow-up time was clipped at 36 months. Patients at risk are displayed under the respective plots. Censors are represented by crosses

Discussion

The present study represents a well-established and thoroughly followed up cohort of 302 “everyday patients”, treated for tumors of the oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx and larynx with postoperative (chemo) radiation in our clinic between 06/2008 and 08/2015. A clear limitation of our study is the obvious selection bias by only including irradiated patients and the partly retrospective nature of the study. Additionally, we report a heterogeneous cohort with patients partly treated for recurrence (7.9% or second primaries (2.0%), therefore the results should be interpreted with some caution. However, the results of our study are in good agreement with previously published cohorts such as RTOG-9501 [17], RTOG-0234 [18], EORTC 22931 [2] and ARO 96–3 [9]. ARO 96–3 is a trial that studied the addition of CDDP and 5-FU to adjuvant radiation in high-risk patients. In ARO 96–3 (chemotherapy arm, 226 patients) and LMU-ARO (ARO-analogue subgroup, 138 patients) 5-year locoregional failure rates were 11.4 and 10.9%, the 5-year distant failure rates were 25.5 and 23% and the 5-year OS rates were 58.1 and 60.6%, respectively. The patients’ characteristics of our subgroup represents a high-risk group with UICC stage III 16.7%, stage IV 80.7, 32.8% R1, 32.1% close margin and 43.1% ECE, 33.9% LVI. 25.2% of the patients had HPVOPC. Overall, the ARO 96–3 chemotherapy regimen was well tolerated which is indicated by the fact that 87% of the patients completed both cycles chemotherapy as intended. With 138 patients treated, the LMU-ARO subgroup is to our knowledge the largest published cohort of patients treated with CDDP/5-FU, supporting its feasibility and corroborating the preliminary results of the ARO 96–3 study. It should be mentioned, that this regimen was discontinued in 2016 due to the lack of solid published long-term data, adopting CDDP mono as new standard of care. Also, the results are in line with other studies with PORT-C (EORTC 22931, RTOG-9501, RTOG-0234). Comparing the LMU-ARO subgroup to RTOG-9501 (5-year locoregional failure rate 10.9% vs 22%, 3-year OS 71% vs 56%), the RTOG cohort (PORT 60/2 Gy with CDDP 100 mg/m2 BSA) had younger patients with similar rates of positive margins, a comparable proportion of oropharyngeal carcinoma (48% vs 55%) but higher rates of at least two affected lymph nodes and/or ECE (83% vs 67%). In comparison of LMU-ARO to EORTC 22931 (5-year locoregional failure rate 10.9% vs 18%, 5-year OS 60.6% vs 53%), the EORTC (PORT 66/2 Gy with CDDP 100 mg/m2 BSA) cohort had also younger patients, comparable rates of positive margins and positive lymph nodes, but higher rates of ECE (61% vs 43%), more T4-Tumors (43% vs 17%) and less oropharyngeal carcinomas (32% vs 55%). The newer RTOG-0234 study compared CDDP+Cetuximab vs Docetaxel+Cetuximab with the docetaxel arm performing better in terms of OS, DFS and distant failure rate. Compared to the RTOG-0234 docetaxel arm (19.9%) and the CDDP arm (19.8%), with 9.7% less locoregional failures after two years were observed in the LMU-ARO subgroup. With a 2-year distant metastasis rate of 16.5%, the LMU-ARO subgroup ranges between the RTOG-0234 docetaxel (13.2%) and the CDDP-Arm (25.0%). The 2-year DFS and OS or the LMU-ARO subgroup was comparable to the Docetaxel-Arm of RTOG 0234 with 69.1% vs 65.9 and 78.1% vs 79.2%, respectively. RTOG 0234 in comparison to the LMU-ARO subgroup had younger patients, more stage IV patients (94% vs 81%), more positive margins (40% vs 33%), more ECE (60% vs 43%), less oropharyngeal carcinoma (34% vs 55%), but the same rate of HPVOPC (26% vs 25,2%). Twenty-four patients in our cohort have been treated due to recurrence of a previously only surgically treated HNSCC. Interestingly, the recurrence or survival endpoints did not differ significantly from the entire cohort in uni- and multivariate analysis. This could be attributable to a selection bias of only re-operating patients with surgically manageable recurrences (R1-Rate 33.3%), excluding patients with fulminant recurrences and thus selecting for less aggressive tumor biology. In the recent decade, it became evident that HPVOPC represents a distinct subgroup of patients with a different prognosis [12, 19]. Also, in our cohort, oropharyngeal carcinoma with positive p16 IHC-staining (HPVOPC) performed significantly better for locoregional failure, distant failure, any failure, DSS, DFS and OS (Table 2, Fig. 3). The 2-year locoregional failure, DFS and OS estimates were 1.8, 89.8 and 93.3%. Furthermore, in multivariate analysis, patients with HPVOPC performed significantly better with regards to all endpoints, except for local failure (p = 0.064) compared with non HPVOPC. In comparison to other cohorts that analyzed HPVOPC, the failure and survival rates are quite similar (DKTK-ROG [14, 20] p16 IHC: 2-year locoregional failure rage 1.6%, 2-year OS 96.9%, RTOG-0234 p16 subgroup: 2-year DFS 76.2% (Doc), 86.4% (Cis), 2-year OS 100% (Doc), 90.9% (Cis); Vienna [15]: 2-year OS 91%; Japan 5-yr OS 84.9% [21] vs LMU 79.9%) With only one local, one regional and three distant recurrence in the HPVOPC group the need for studies investigating treatment de-escalation in selected patients is underlined [22, 23]. Interestingly, re-classifying the HPVOPC group according to the new UICC 8th edition, a massive stage migration can be observed. Whereas in UICC 7th edition 18.3 and 73.3% of the tumors have been classified as stage III and IV, in UICC 8th edition only 2 tumors are stage III and no tumors qualify for stage IV (see Table 1). 70.0 and 26.7% of the HPVOPC are now classified as stage I or II, reflecting the good prognosis for this disease [19, 24, 25]. As of now, HPVOPC is still being treated similar to non HPVOPC due to the lack of clinical evidence. However, de-escalation strategies are being investigated in clinical trials: The PATHOS trial [26], the ECOG trial [27] the DART-HPV-trial [28], the DELPHI trial [29] and the ADEPT-trial [30] will hopefully provide new evidence for the feasibility and safety of dose or chemotherapy modifications for HPVOPC in the adjuvant setting. With a high availability of pathological factors, such as resection status (97.4%) ECE (99.0%), LI (90.7%), VI (90.7%) and HPV-p16-status (77.2% of all tumors; 84% of oropharyngeal tumors), a long-time follow-up (median 45 months) and well documented events (26 local, 33 locoregional, 39 distant recurrences and 97 deaths) our study provides valid data for extensive statistical analysis. In uni- and multivariate analysis previously described risk factors could be confirmed, although as a clear limitation the inclusion of only patients in need for adjuvant (chemo)radiation harbors an intrinsic selection bias. In addition, the results of the analysis should be interpreted with caution due to its retrospective nature. By focusing on known risk factors in the analyses, the risk of multiple testing is limited. In multivariate analysis risk factors such as positive resection margins (HR 3.354, p = 0.020) and PNI (HR 2.590, p = 0.047) were significantly associated with higher risk for local recurrence (Table 2). Close margins were not significantly associated with higher risk for local recurrence (multivariate HR = 1.113, p = 0.865), however, in our clinic most patients with close margins had concomitant chemotherapy, thus a concealing effect of the added chemotherapy cannot be ruled out. Additionally, in multivariate analysis, ECE was associated with significantly impaired locoregional (HR 2.939, p = 0.024), distant (HR 3.109, p = 0.007) and overall (HR 3.113, p = 0.001) control as well as impaired disease-specific (HR 2.160, p = 0.044) and disease-free (HR 1.876, p = 0.010) survival rates. This study is well in line with the literature with ECE being a major risk factor for poor outcome [31, 32]. Interestingly, in multivariate analysis, positive nodal disease (HR 1.984, p = 0.025) was a predictor for impaired overall survival without significant additional risk by ECE (HR 1.393, p = 0.205). In multivariate analysis, LVI was significantly associated with an increased risk for overall relapses (HR 1.996, p = 0.030). For LVI, it has to be taken into account, that only 68 patients had LVI reported by the pathologist, but 193 patients had positive nodal disease, thus a sampling error cannot be excluded. Yet, LVI but not nodal positive disease remained statistically significant in multivariate analysis. All-in-all, our data indicates that further therapeutic improvements for patients with locally advanced HNSCC are still needed. Interestingly, in our cohort more distant than locoregional failures were observed pointing towards the need of innovative systemic therapies such as immunotherapy [33, 34]. On the other hand, the results for HPVOPC were excellent, supporting the efforts to de-escalate treatment regimens in selected patients with HPVOPC. Apart from the HPV-status, pathological features such as R-Status, LVI, PNI, positive nodal disease and ECE provide solid information for the assessment of the risk of recurrence. However, innovative biomarkers [35-40] might further assist to select appropriate patients for possible treatment modification, such as dose-escalation or de-escalation, intensification or de-intensification of chemotherapy or the addition of immunotherapy [41].

Conclusion

In conclusion, the adjuvant LMU-KKG-cohort represents the “everyday patient” treated in our facility, affirming previously described risk factors and compares in line with historical cohorts, thus laying a sound foundation for further translational research within the framework of a clinical cooperation group.
  36 in total

Review 1.  Immunotherapy for Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma: A Review of Current and Emerging Therapeutic Options.

Authors:  Jessica M Moskovitz; Jennifer Moy; Tanguy Y Seiwert; Robert L Ferris
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2017-05-15

2.  Impact of p16 expression in oropharyngeal cancer in the postoperative setting: the necessity of re-evaluating traditional risk stratification.

Authors:  Jeongshim Lee; Jee Suk Chang; Hyung Joo Kwon; Se-Heon Kim; Sang Joon Shin; Ki Chang Keum
Journal:  Jpn J Clin Oncol       Date:  2016-07-29       Impact factor: 3.019

3.  Development and Validation of a Gene Signature for Patients with Head and Neck Carcinomas Treated by Postoperative Radio(chemo)therapy.

Authors:  Stefan Schmidt; Annett Linge; Alex Zwanenburg; Stefan Leger; Fabian Lohaus; Constanze Krenn; Steffen Appold; Volker Gudziol; Alexander Nowak; Cläre von Neubeck; Inge Tinhofer; Volker Budach; Ali Sak; Martin Stuschke; Panagiotis Balermpas; Claus Rödel; Hatice Bunea; Anca-Ligia Grosu; Amir Abdollahi; Jürgen Debus; Ute Ganswindt; Claus Belka; Steffi Pigorsch; Stephanie E Combs; David Mönnich; Daniel Zips; Gustavo B Baretton; Frank Buchholz; Michael Baumann; Mechthild Krause; Steffen Löck
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2018-01-03       Impact factor: 12.531

4.  Comparison of radiochemotherapy alone to surgery plus radio(chemo)therapy for non-metastatic stage III/IV squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck: A matched-pair analysis.

Authors:  Dirk Rades; Thekla Meyners; Nadja Kazic; Amira Bajrovic; Volker Rudat; Steven E Schild
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  2011-08-16       Impact factor: 3.621

5.  Defining risk levels in locally advanced head and neck cancers: a comparative analysis of concurrent postoperative radiation plus chemotherapy trials of the EORTC (#22931) and RTOG (# 9501).

Authors:  Jacques Bernier; Jay S Cooper; T F Pajak; M van Glabbeke; J Bourhis; Arlene Forastiere; Esat Mahmut Ozsahin; John R Jacobs; J Jassem; Kie-Kian Ang; J L Lefèbvre
Journal:  Head Neck       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 3.147

6.  HPV16 DNA status is a strong prognosticator of loco-regional control after postoperative radiochemotherapy of locally advanced oropharyngeal carcinoma: results from a multicentre explorative study of the German Cancer Consortium Radiation Oncology Group (DKTK-ROG).

Authors:  Fabian Lohaus; Annett Linge; Inge Tinhofer; Volker Budach; Eleni Gkika; Martin Stuschke; Panagiotis Balermpas; Claus Rödel; Melanie Avlar; Anca-Ligia Grosu; Amir Abdollahi; Jürgen Debus; Christine Bayer; Claus Belka; Steffi Pigorsch; Stephanie E Combs; David Mönnich; Daniel Zips; Cläre von Neubeck; Gustavo B Baretton; Steffen Löck; Howard D Thames; Mechthild Krause; Michael Baumann
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  2014-12-02       Impact factor: 6.280

7.  Improved survival of patients with human papillomavirus-positive head and neck squamous cell carcinoma in a prospective clinical trial.

Authors:  Carole Fakhry; William H Westra; Sigui Li; Anthony Cmelak; John A Ridge; Harlan Pinto; Arlene Forastiere; Maura L Gillison
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2008-02-12       Impact factor: 13.506

8.  Adjuvant radiotherapy improves overall survival for patients with lymph node-positive head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Amir Lavaf; Eric M Genden; Jamie A Cesaretti; Stuart Packer; Johnny Kao
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2008-02-01       Impact factor: 6.860

9.  Postoperative chemoradiotherapy and cetuximab for high-risk squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck: Radiation Therapy Oncology Group RTOG-0234.

Authors:  Paul M Harari; Jonathan Harris; Merrill S Kies; Jeffrey N Myers; Richard C Jordan; Maura L Gillison; Robert L Foote; Mitchell Machtay; Marvin Rotman; Deepak Khuntia; William Straube; Qiang Zhang; Kian Ang
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-07-07       Impact factor: 44.544

10.  Long term results of postoperative Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) in the treatment of Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) located in the oropharynx or oral cavity.

Authors:  M Hoffmann; L Saleh-Ebrahimi; F Zwicker; P Haering; A Schwahofer; J Debus; P E Huber; F Roeder
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2015-12-04       Impact factor: 3.481

View more
  9 in total

1.  Functional Outcomes in Head and Neck Cancer Patients.

Authors:  Herbert Riechelmann; Daniel Dejaco; Teresa Bernadette Steinbichler; Anna Lettenbichler-Haug; Maria Anegg; Ute Ganswindt; Gabriele Gamerith; David Riedl
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-25       Impact factor: 6.575

2.  The impact of adjuvant therapies on patient survival and the recurrence patterns for resected stage IIa-IVa lower thoracic oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Yichun Wang; Liyang Zhu; Wanli Xia; Liming Wu; Fan Wang
Journal:  World J Surg Oncol       Date:  2018-11-07       Impact factor: 2.754

3.  Digital scoring of EpCAM and slug expression as prognostic markers in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas.

Authors:  Henrik Schinke; Theresa Heider; Timm Herkommer; Florian Simon; Alexandra Blancke Soares; Gisela Kranz; Daniel Samaga; Laura Dajka; Annette Feuchtinger; Axel Walch; Laura Valeanu; Christoph Walz; Thomas Kirchner; Martin Canis; Philipp Baumeister; Claus Belka; Cornelius Maihöfer; Sebastian Marschner; Ulrike Pflugradt; Ute Ganswindt; Julia Hess; Horst Zitzelsberger; Olivier Gires
Journal:  Mol Oncol       Date:  2020-12-29       Impact factor: 6.603

4.  Early senescence and production of senescence-associated cytokines are major determinants of radioresistance in head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Ulrike Schoetz; Diana Klein; Julia Hess; Seyd Shnayien; Steffen Spoerl; Michael Orth; Samet Mutlu; Roman Hennel; Anja Sieber; Ute Ganswindt; Benedikt Luka; Andreas R Thomsen; Kristian Unger; Verena Jendrossek; Horst Zitzelsberger; Nils Blüthgen; Claus Belka; Steffen Unkel; Bertram Klinger; Kirsten Lauber
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 8.469

Review 5.  Adding Concomitant Chemotherapy to Postoperative Radiotherapy in Oral Cavity Carcinoma with Minor Risk Factors: Systematic Review of the Literature and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Alessia Di Rito; Francesco Fiorica; Roberta Carbonara; Francesca Di Pressa; Federica Bertolini; Francesco Mannavola; Frank Lohr; Angela Sardaro; Elisa D'Angelo
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-29       Impact factor: 6.575

6.  Integration of p16/HPV DNA Status with a 24-miRNA-Defined Molecular Phenotype Improves Clinically Relevant Stratification of Head and Neck Cancer Patients.

Authors:  Julia Hess; Kristian Unger; Cornelius Maihoefer; Lars Schüttrumpf; Peter Weber; Sebastian Marschner; Ludmila Wintergerst; Ulrike Pflugradt; Philipp Baumeister; Axel Walch; Christine Woischke; Thomas Kirchner; Martin Werner; Kristin Sörensen; Michael Baumann; Ingeborg Tinhofer; Stephanie E Combs; Jürgen Debus; Henning Schäfer; Mechthild Krause; Annett Linge; Jens von der Grün; Martin Stuschke; Daniel Zips; Martin Canis; Kirsten Lauber; Ute Ganswindt; Michael Henke; Horst Zitzelsberger; Claus Belka
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-31       Impact factor: 6.575

7.  Single-center versus multi-center data sets for molecular prognostic modeling: a simulation study.

Authors:  Daniel Samaga; Roman Hornung; Herbert Braselmann; Julia Hess; Horst Zitzelsberger; Claus Belka; Anne-Laure Boulesteix; Kristian Unger
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2020-05-14       Impact factor: 3.481

8.  A prognostic mRNA expression signature of four 16q24.3 genes in radio(chemo)therapy-treated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC).

Authors:  Ludmila Wintergerst; Martin Selmansberger; Cornelius Maihoefer; Lars Schüttrumpf; Axel Walch; Christina Wilke; Adriana Pitea; Christine Woischke; Philipp Baumeister; Thomas Kirchner; Claus Belka; Ute Ganswindt; Horst Zitzelsberger; Kristian Unger; Julia Hess
Journal:  Mol Oncol       Date:  2018-10-26       Impact factor: 6.603

9.  Definitive chemoradiotherapy in patients with squamous cell cancers of the head and neck - results from an unselected cohort of the clinical cooperation group "Personalized Radiotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer".

Authors:  Lars Schüttrumpf; Sebastian Marschner; Katrin Scheu; Julia Hess; Sibylle Rietzler; Axel Walch; Philipp Baumeister; Thomas Kirchner; Ute Ganswindt; Horst Zitzelsberger; Claus Belka; Cornelius Maihoefer
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2020-01-06       Impact factor: 3.481

  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.