Publication: Pretreatment photopenia on F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography-computed tomography scans predicts poor prognosis in nasopharyngeal cancer patients undergoing concurrent chemoradiotherapy
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Topkan, Erkan
Mertsoylu, Hüseyin
Özdemir, Yurday
Küçük, Ahmet
Torun, Neşe
Beşen, Ali Ayberk
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English
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Abstract
Objectives: to investigate the influence of pretreatment primary tumor or nodal photopenia (PP) on F-18-fluorodeoxyglu- case positron emission tomography-computed tomography (FDG PET-CT), an indicator of tumor ischemia, on survival results of nasopharyngeal cancers (NPCs) treated with concurrent chemoradiotherapy (C-CRT). Methods: the pre-C-CRT FDG PET-CT scans of 104 patients with NPC (cT1-4 N0-3 M0) were retrospectively examined to determine the presence of PP (PP+). Our primary endpoint was the influence of PP+ on overall survival (OS), while the progression-free survival (PFS) and locoregional PFS (LRPFS) constituted the secondary endpoints. Results: the PP+ was detected in 29 (27.9%): nine (8.7%), seven (6.7%), and 13 (12.5%) in the primary tumor alone, primary tumor plus neck nodes, and neck nodes alone, respectively. Because the PP+ cases were small by count per location, all comparative analyses were performed according to overall PP+/PP- status instead of per detected site. At a median follow-up of 67.8 months (range, 9 to 130 months), the median survival times were not reached (NR) for the entire population. while 5-year OS, LRPFS, and PFS rates were 73.3%, 68.2%, and 63.4%, respectively. Comparatively the PP patients exhibited significantly poorer median OS (49.8 months vs. NR, P<0.001), LRPFS (40.7 months vs. NR, P=0.001), and PFS (31.8 months vs. NR, P=0.002) durations than their PP- counterparts. Furthermore, the PP+ retained its independent prognostic significance in multivariate analysis (P <0.001). Conclusion: present results uncovered the pre-C-CRT PP as an independent predictor of poor prognosis for NPC patients, which underscore the requirement for the fortification of the local and systemic treatments in hypoxic NPCs.
Source:
Clinical and Experimental Otorhinolaryngology
Publisher:
Korean Society of Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
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Subject
Medicine, Otorhinolaryngology