| Literature DB >> 33809427 |
Constanza Saka-Herrán1, Enric Jané-Salas2, Antoni Mari-Roig2, Albert Estrugo-Devesa2, José López-López2,3.
Abstract
The purpose of this review was to identify and describe the causes that influence the time-intervals in the pathway of diagnosis and treatment of oral cancer and to assess its impact on prognosis and survival. The review was structured according to the recommendations of the Aarhus statement, considering original data from individual studies and systematic reviews that reported outcomes related to the patient, diagnostic and pre-treatment intervals. The patient interval is the major contributor to the total time-interval. Unawareness of signs and/or symptoms, denial and lack of knowledge about oral cancer are the major contributors to the process of seeking medical attention. The diagnostic interval is influenced by tumor factors, delays in referral due to higher number of consultations and previous treatment with different medicines or dental procedures and by professional factors such as experience and lack of knowledge related to the disease and diagnostic procedures. Patients with advanced stage disease, primary treatment with radiotherapy, treatment at an academic facility and transitions in care are associated with prolonged pre-treatment intervals. An emerging body of evidence supports the impact of prolonged pre-treatment and treatment intervals with poorer survival from oral cancer.Entities:
Keywords: early diagnosis; head and neck cancer; oral cancer; survival rate; time-to-treatment; treatment delays
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809427 PMCID: PMC8000007 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13061321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Time-intervals in the pathway of diagnosis and treatment of oral cancer.
Systematic reviews assessing the impact of time-to-treatment on survival from head and neck cancer.
| Autor/Country/Year/Reference | Included Studies/Design | Patients | Exposure | Outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Graboyes et al. /US/2019 | 18 | Patients who underwent treatment of SCC of the oral cavity, pharynx or larynx | DTI | OS | |
| Seoane et al. /Spain/2016 | 10 | Patients with symptomatic primary oral SCC | DI | OS | |
| Seoane et al. /Spain/2012 | 10 | Patients with HNC | PD | OS |
Abbreviations: SCC = Squamous cell carcinoma; DTI = Diagnosis to treatment initiation; S-PORT = Surgery to postoperative radiotherapy initiation; TPT = Treatment package time (surgery to completion of postoperative radiotherapy); OS = Overall survival; HR = Hazard Ratio; DI = Diagnostic interval (time-interval between first symptomatic presentation and patient referral, or histological diagnosis or start to treatment); HNC = Head and neck cancer; PD = Patient delay (time from the patient’s first awareness of symptom/sign to the first consultation with a physician or dentist); PDI = Presentation-to-diagnosis interval (time from the patient’s first consultation with a physician or a dentist to the date of histological diagnosis); DD = Diagnostic delay (the sum of the patient and professional delay); RD = Referral delay (difference between the date of first symptom and the date of the referral letter transferring the patient to the secondary care level).
Studies assessing the impact of pre-treatment and treatment intervals on survival from head and neck cancer.
| Author/Country/Year/Reference | Study Design | Population | Exposure | Outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tsai et al./Taiwan/2017 | Retrospective | 21,263 patients diagnosed with SCC from the oral cavity from 2004–2010 identified from the TCRD | DTI | OS | >120 days ( |
| Sharma et al./US/2016 | Retrospective | 6,606 patients diagnosed with stage III or IV OSCC from 2003–2006 identified from the NCDB | DTI | OS | >30 days: HR = 1.12 (1.03–1.20) |
| Van Harten et al./Netherlands/2015 | Retrospective | 13,140 patients diagnosed with HNC from 2005–2011 identified from the NCR | DTI | OS | >30 days: HR = 1.00 (0.94–1.07) |
| Murphy et al./US/2016 | Retrospective | 51,655 patients diagnosed with HNSCC from 1998–2011 identified from the NCDB | DTI | OS | ≥91 days: HR = 1.23 (1.15–1.32) |
| Fujiwara et al./US/2017 | Retrospective | 4868 patients diagnosed with SCC of the oral cavity from 1998–2011 identified from the NCDB | DSI | OS | |
| Ho et al./US/2018 | Retrospective | 15,064 patients diagnosed with HNSCC from 2004–2013 identified from the NCDB | DTI | OS | |
| López-Cedrún et al./Spain/2020 | Retrospective | 183 patients diagnosed with oral cancer from 1998–2008 from the A Coruña University Hospital | TI | OS | 24–55.5 days: HR = 1.75 ( |
Abbreviations: SCC = Squamous Cell Carcinoma; TCRD = Taiwan Cancer Registry Database; DTI = Diagnosis-to-treatment interval; OS = Overall Survival; OSCC = Oropharyngeal Squamous Cell Carcinoma; NCDB = National Cancer Data Base; HNC = Head and Neck Cancer; NCR = Netherlands Cancer Registry; HNSCC = Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma; DSI = Diagnosis-to-surgery interval; SRTI = Surgery-to-radiotherapy interval (initiation); RTI = Radiotherapy duration interval; TTP = Total Treatment Package (surgery to radiotherapy end); DRTI = Diagnosis-to-radiotherapy end; TI = Total Interval (from first symptom awareness to the initiation of treatment).