Analysis of results of radiotherapy for oropharyngeal cancer / Péter Trauttwein, Tibor Major, Zoltán Takácsi-Nagy
Bibliogr.: p. 318-320. - Abstr. eng. - DOI: https://doi.org/10.1556/2060.2024.00439
In: Physiology International. - ISSN 2498-602X, eISSN 2677-0164. - 2024. 111. évf. 4. sz., p. 312-320. : ill.
Introduction: Smoking and alcohol consumption remain the two most important risk factors for the development of oropharyngeal tumours, but there is an increasing number of younger patients (age <50 years) with human papillomavirus (HPV) association origin, also known as positivity. The role of radiotherapy (RT) in the treatment of this disease is paramount. Aim: To describe the radiotherapy results for oropharyngeal tumours and to search for prognostic parameters that influence the response of these malignant lesions to radio-chemotherapy. Methods: 95 patients underwent definitive radio- or radiochemotherapy (RCT) for histologically squamous cell, oropharyngeal carcinoma at our Institute between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2020, of which 51 (54%) received the latter. The mean age was 61.9 years (37-82 years) and the male-female ratio was 69:26. The average total dose was 69 Gy (range: 54-70 Gy). Results: The 5-year local control (LC), cancer-specific survival (CCS), and overall survival (OS) calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method were 71, 69, and 58%, respectively. Forty-four cases (46%) were confirmed to have HPV involvement. HPV positive (+) tumours showed significantly better behaviour compared to HPV negative (-) cases in LC, CCS and OS. Smoking had a significant negative effect on cure rates: LC, CCS and OS were better in non-smokers. A significant negative effect of smoking on survival was also observed in HPV-associated cases. For HPV- lesions, RCT had a stronger effect on LC than RT alone (64 vs 43%, P 5 0.03). Conclusions: HPV-associated malignancies show better survival outcomes to radio +- chemotherapy than their HPV- counterparts. In all cases, smoking worsens the response to treatment. For HPV- tumours, chemotherapy with radiation, compared to irradiation alone, has a more significant effect on survival outcomes, whereas for HPVţ tumours this effect is less pronounced. Kulcsszavak: oropharyngeal cancer, radiotherapy, radio-chemotherapy, HPV, prognostic factors