| Literature DB >> 33437800 |
Madeleine P Strohl1, Katherine C Wai1, Patrick K Ha1.
Abstract
Human papillomavirus-related (HPV+) oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) is a relatively new clinical entity that is dramatically on the rise globally. HPV+ OPSCC is thought to be a separate clinical entity compared to HPV- OPSCC with a distinct tumor biology. Patients with HPV associated disease have been shown to have a substantially better prognosis and overall survival than those patients with the HPV negative (HPV-) counterpart. The standard of care for OPSCC is definitive radiation therapy (RT) and concurrent chemoradiation therapy (CRT), for lower and higher stage disease, respectively. However, traditional CRT is also associated with severe acute and late toxicities affecting patient quality of life, such as severe mucositis, dry mouth and dysphagia. Considering that HPV+ OPSCC is on the rise in a younger, healthier patient population and the good prognosis of HPV-related disease, there has been a focus on reducing treatment toxicities and optimizing quality of life while maintaining favorable oncologic outcomes. A variety of such de-escalation regimens are currently being explored in recently completed and ongoing clinical trials. Alterations to the standard chemotherapy, radiation and surgical regimens are being explored. This review will provide an overview of the rationale for and available results of the major de-intensification strategies in the treatment of locally advanced HPV+ OPSCC. 2020 Annals of Translational Medicine. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Human papilloma virus; de-intensification; oropharyngeal cancer
Year: 2020 PMID: 33437800 PMCID: PMC7791209 DOI: 10.21037/atm-20-2984
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transl Med ISSN: 2305-5839
Figure 1Positive emission tomography/computer tomography (PET/CT) of a patient with locally advanced base of tongue HPV+ OPSCC. (A) Axial view. (B) Coronal view.
Active clinical trials for de-escalated treatment strategies (clinicaltrials.gov)
| Strategy | Clinical trial number | Target population | Intervention/treatment | Primary outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cetuximab in place of cisplatin | NCT01663259 ( | 7th edition stage III-IV disease (excluding N3 or T4), smoking history <10 pack years | Cetuximab given in place of cisplatin during concurrent CRT | Recurrence rate at 3 years |
| Immunotherapy in place of cisplatin | NCT03799445 ( | 8th edition stage 1 and 2 (T1 N2, T2 N1-N2, T3 N0-N2) excluding T1N0-N1 and T2N0 | Single arm study of IMRT with nivolumab and ipilimumab in place of cisplatin | Dose limiting toxicity, complete response rate at 6 months, progression free survival at 2 years |
| Radiation therapy dose reduction and/or omission of adjuvant chemotherapy | NCT03323463 ( | AJCC 8th edition T1-2/N1-2b | Patients receive reduced dose RT (30 Gy) over 2 weeks during concurrent CRT | Treatment effectiveness at 2 years |
| NCT02254278 (NRG HN002 trial) ( | AJCC 7th edition T1-T2, N1-N2b or T3, N0-N2b | Patients randomized to receive 60 Gy RT with or without weekly cisplatin | Dysphagia severity, 2-year progression free survival | |
| NCT03952585 ( | AJCC 8th edition T1-2, N1, M0 or T3, N0-N1, M0 | Patients randomized to receive standard CRT, reduced dose RT with cisplatin, or reduced dose RT with nivolumab | 2-year progression free survival and quality of life (MDADI) | |
| Induction chemotherapy followed by reduced radiation or chemoradiation | NCT04012502 ( | AJCC 8th edition T1-2/N1-3 (except T1N1M0 and single LN <3 cm) or T3-4N0-3M0 in China | Patients with good response to induction chemotherapy undergo reduced dose adjuvant RT (60 Gy) and omit concurrent cisplatin | 2-year progression free and overall survival |
| Surgery followed by reduced adjuvant therapy | NCT02215265 (PATHOS Trial) ( | AJCC TNM 7th edition stage T1-T3, N0-N2b | Transoral laser resection of tumors followed by reduced dose adjuvant RT | Overall survival, MD Anderson Dysphagia Inventory (MDADI) score at 2 years |
| NCT02908477 (DART-HPV Trial) ( | Patients who have undergone transoral resection and have T3/T4 primary disease, ENE, LVI, PNI, or N2b disease or below | Transoral resection followed by standard CRT or reduced dose RT with concurrent chemotherapy | Treatment toxicity, overall survival, quality of life | |
| NCT01898494 (ECOG 3311 Trial) ( | AJCC 7th T1-T2 OPSCC and N1-N2b neck disease | Transoral resection of tumor and neck dissection followed by risk-adjusted adjuvant treatment | 2-year progression free survival | |
| NCT03729518 ( | AJCC 7th pathologic T0-3 and N0-N2b disease with <5 positive lymph nodes | Reduced dose (50 Gy) RT with sparing of primary tumor bed in appropriate patients | 2-year locoregional control | |
| NCT01687413 (ADEPT Trial) ( | Patients that have undergone transoral resection and neck dissection with negative margins at primary site, ECS in nodal metastasis must be present | Reduced dose adjuvant RT and removal of chemotherapy | 5-year disease free survival and locoregional control | |
| NCT03396718 (DELPHI Trial) ( | Patients who underwent surgical resection HPV+ OPSCC | Intermediate risk patients will be treated with reduced dose RT to tumor and neck | 2-year locoregional recurrence |