| Literature DB >> 31696052 |
Jean-Jacques Stelmes1, Vincent Gregoire2, Vincent Vander Poorten3, Wojciech Golusiñski4, Mateusz Szewczyk4, Terry Jones5, Mohssen Ansarin6, Martina A Broglie7, Roland Giger8, Jens Peter Klussmann9, Mererid Evans10, Jean Bourhis11, C René Leemans12, Giuseppe Spriano13, Andreas Dietz14, Keith Hunter15, Frank Zimmermann16, Ingeborg Tinhofer17, Joanne M Patterson18, Silvana Quaglini19, Anne-Sophie Govaerts20, Catherine Fortpied20, Christian Simon21.
Abstract
Dysphagia represents one of the most serious adverse events after curative-intent treatments with a tremendous impact on quality of life in patients with head and neck cancers. Novel surgical and radiation therapy techniques have been developed to better preserve swallowing function, while not negatively influencing local control and/or overall survival. This review focuses on the current literature of swallowing outcomes after curative treatment strategies. Available results from recent studies relevant to this topic are presented, demonstrating the potential role of new treatment modalities for early- and intermediate-stage oropharyngeal cancers. Based on this, we present the rationale and design of the currently active EORTC 1420 "Best of" trial, and highlight the potential of this study to help prioritizing either surgery- or radiation-based treatment modalities for the treatment of oropharyngeal cancer in the future.Entities:
Keywords: EORTC 1420; functional outcome; head and neck cancer; organ preservation; oropharyngeal cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 31696052 PMCID: PMC6817682 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00999
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Selected studies on dysphagia outcomes following primary radiotherapy with IMRT.
| Anand et al. ( | IMRT | RT alone: 29 | Stage III-IV: 77.3 | Pooled analysis | 62 | 19 | |
| Feng et al. ( | SW IMRT | CRT: 100 | Stage III-IV: 100 | Prospective cohort study | 73 | 36 | |
| Schwartz et al. ( | Split-field IMRT with laryngeal shielding | Weekly induction CT followed by CRT in 42 | Stage IV: 100 | Phase II trial | 48 | 24 | |
| Nutting et al. ( | IMRT vs. 3D-CRT | RT alone: 68 or 83 | Stage III-IV-68 or 83 | Phase III RCT | 94 | 44 | |
| Roe et al. ( | PS IMRT | RT alone: 21 | Stage III-IV: 92 | Pooled analysis | 62 | 12 | |
| Mazzola et al. ( | IMRT | CRT: 54% | Stage III-IV: 68 | Pooled analysis | 56 | 12 | |
| Goepfert et al. ( | Split-field IMRT with laryngeal shielding | Induction CT. +concurrent CT: 28% | Stage III-IV: 100% | Pooled analysis | 46 | 24 | |
| MD Anderson Head and Neck Cancer Symptom Working Group ( | Split-field IMRT/whole field | CRT | T1-T4 N0 M0 | Pooled analysis | 300 | 48 |
PS, Parotid-sparing; SW, Swallowing-sparing; CT, Chemotherapy; CRT, combined chemoradiotherapy; RAD, radiation induced dysphagia.
Scores are in a scale of 0 to 100; higher scores denote worse symptoms.
Dysphagia outcomes of trans-oral surgical (TOS) approaches for oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC).
| Iseli et al. ( | TORS | T1:35, T2:44 | Neoadjuvant RT:22 | Prospective cohort | 54 | 13 | Mean MDADI score declined from 75 to 65 at 2 months |
| Moore et al. ( | TORS | T1:33, T2:40 | PORT: 18 | Prospective case study | 45 | 12.3 | |
| Genden et al. ( | TORS | T1:53, T2:43 | PORT: 10 | Prospective case control study | 30 | 14.8 | |
| Sinclair et al. ( | TORS | T1:45, T2:55 | PORT: 45 | Prospective case series | 42 | 17 | |
| Moore et al. ( | TORS | T1:46, T2:39 | PORT: 21 | Prospective study | 66 | 34 | 95.5% of patients maintain nutrition without feeding tube |
| More et al. ( | TORS | T1:30, T2:35 | PORT: 40 | Prospective comparative study | 20 | 14 | |
| Chen et al. ( | TORS/TLM | T1:52, T2:39 | PORT: 84 | Retrospective matched pair analysis | 31 | 20 | |
| Sethia et al. ( | TORS | T1: 62 T2:38 | TORS alone:12 | Prospective cohort study | 111 | 35 | |
| Morisod et al. ( | TORS | 19 T1/T2N0 | PORT: 28 | Prospective cohort study | 29 | 20 | In the TORS only group: 67% with stable or improved FOSS score |
Mean FOIS: Mean Functional Oral Intake Score, PORT: Post-operative RT; POCRT: Post-operative CRT; TLM: Trans-oral laser-microsurgery.