| Literature DB >> 34250291 |
Yu Oikawa1, Takuma Kugimoto1, Yoshihisa Kashima1, Kohei Okuyama1, Toshimitsu Ohsako1, Takeshi Kuroshima1, Hideaki Hirai1, Hirofumi Tomioka1, Hiroaki Shimamoto1, Yasuyuki Michi1, Hiroyuki Harada1.
Abstract
The incidence of oral cancer in Japan accounts for 1% of all cancers, with oral tongue cancer accounting for 60% of oral cancers based on the subsite. The most common histologic type is squamous cell carcinoma. This study aimed to evaluate the series of surgical treatments for 432 patients with oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC). Initial surgical treatments for the primary site included partial glossectomy, hemiglossectomy, and total or subtotal glossectomy in 348, 58, and 26 patients, respectively. Therapeutic neck dissection, elective neck dissection, and subsequent neck dissection were performed in 74, 53, and 37 patients, respectively. Patients with advanced cases had level IIb, IV, and V metastasis and outside regional lymph node metastases. The cumulative 5-year disease-specific survival rate for OTSCC was 92.8%, and the rates for each stage were 96.6%, 93.9%, 84.1%, and 79.0% in stages I, II, III, and IV, respectively. The recurrence rate, overall salvage rate for recurrent cases, and rate for the additional surgical group were 10.4%, 46.7%, and 78.6%, respectively. Patients with multiple cervical lymph node metastases, extranodal extension, metastases to multiple levels, and lower neck metastases had poor prognosis. In conclusion, careful follow-up is necessary to detect recurrence of primary tumors at a stage when surgical treatment can be performed, and cervical lymph node status is one of the most important prognostic factors in OTSCC. 2021, National Center for Global Health and Medicine.Entities:
Keywords: neck dissection; oral cancer; oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC); surgical treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34250291 PMCID: PMC8239375 DOI: 10.35772/ghm.2020.01084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Med ISSN: 2434-9186