Salvage Surgery Following Organ Preservation With Local Regrowth After Watch and Wait: Picture Still Unclear

2021 ◽  
Vol 64 (5) ◽  
pp. e96-e97
Author(s):  
Ronnie Mathew ◽  
Ee Lin Toh
2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (8) ◽  
pp. 1053-1062
Author(s):  
Laura M. Fernandez ◽  
Nuno L. Figueiredo ◽  
Angelita Habr-Gama ◽  
Guilherme P. São Julião ◽  
Pedro Vieira ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e15692-e15692
Author(s):  
Mohammed Alharthi ◽  
Olivier Charette ◽  
Carole Richard ◽  
Eric Debroux ◽  
Francois Dagbert ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Stijn van Weert ◽  
Sat Parmar ◽  
C. René Leemans

AbstractSalvage surgery (SS) in head and neck cancer is considered a last resort treatment after failure of organ preservation treatments. It offers challenges to the patients and the surgeon. The outcome of SS is often uncertain in terms of survival and quality of life. This paper offers an overview of evolution in SS, tumor and patient factors to be considered, challenges in reconstructive surgery, complications of SS and the changing landscape with regard to increasing incidence of human papillomavirus positive tumours, the role of transoral robotic surgery, the importance of multidisciplinary management and shared decision making.


2018 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
pp. S628-S629
Author(s):  
J.A. Dominguez Rullan ◽  
A. Hervás Morón ◽  
M.C. Vallejo Ocaña ◽  
M. Martín Martín ◽  
R. Morís ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 593-598 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Urba ◽  
Gregory Wolf ◽  
Avraham Eisbruch ◽  
Francis Worden ◽  
Julia Lee ◽  
...  

Purpose Primary chemoradiotherapy in patients with advanced laryngeal cancer can achieve high rates of organ preservation without sacrificing survival compared with radiation alone or conventional laryngectomy. Appropriate selection of patients for organ preservation approaches could enhance overall treatment outcome and quality of life. We conducted a phase II organ preservation trial for patients with stage III and IV larynx cancer to determine whether late salvage surgery rates could be decreased and survival improved by selecting patients for organ preservation based on response to a single cycle of induction chemotherapy. Patients and Methods The chemotherapy was cisplatin 100 mg/m2 on day 1 and fluorouracil 1,000 mg/m2/d for 5 days. Patients who achieved less than 50% response had immediate laryngectomy. Patients who achieved more than 50% response went on to concurrent chemoradiotherapy. Histologic complete responders after chemoradiotherapy received two more cycles of chemotherapy. Patients with residual disease after chemoradiotherapy had planned salvage surgery. Results Of 97 eligible patients, 73 (75%) achieved more than 50% response and received chemoradiotherapy. A total of 29 patients (30%) had salvage surgery; 19 patients (20%) had early salvage surgery after the single cycle of induction chemotherapy, three patients (3%) had late salvage surgery after chemoradiotherapy, six patients (6%) eventually had salvage surgery for recurrence, and one patient had laryngectomy for chondroradionecrosis. The median follow-up time was 41.9 months. The overall survival rate at 3 years is 85%. The cause-specific survival rate was 87%. Larynx preservation was achieved in 69 patients (70%). Conclusion These results confirm excellent larynx preservation and improved overall survival rates compared with historical results.


2021 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura M. Fernandez ◽  
Nuno L. Figueiredo ◽  
Angelita Habr-Gama ◽  
Guilherme P. São Julião ◽  
Pedro Vieira ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 5527-5527 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Cmelak ◽  
S. Li ◽  
B. Murphy ◽  
B. Burkey ◽  
G. L. Adams ◽  
...  

5527 Background: Taxane-based concurrent chemoradiation (CCR) for head and neck cancers has proven feasible and has a favorable toxicity profile compared to concurrent cisplatin and radiation. This phase II multi-institutional trial evaluates taxane-based induction chemotherapy followed by CCR for organ preservation in resectable Stage III/IV L and OP patients. Methods: Eligibility: Resectable stage T2N+, or T3-T4N0–3M0 biopsy-proven squamous Ca, age ≥18, PS 0–2, good organ function, and no prior chemotherapy or radiation. Treatment: induction paclitaxel (P) 175 mg/m2 and carboplatin (C) AUC 6 for 2 cycles q21d followed by concurrent P 30 mg/m2 q7d with 70 Gy if no evidence of progression. Weekly epoetin alpha 40kU was used if Hgb ≤15 (male) or ≤14 (female). The primary endpoint is organ preservation (freedom from salvage surgery with preserved speech and swallowing). Results: 105/111 pts (69 OP, 36 larynx) were eligible. Median FU is 33 months. No grade 5 toxicities occurred. 94% received full dose RT and 91% received ≥5 cycles of concurrent paclitaxel. At one year post-treatment, 13 (12%) patients required salvage surgery at the primary site (7-L, 6-OP), and 6 pts (6%) progressed and died (3-L, 3-OP). 1 pt (1%) died without progression and 85 pts (81%) are alive without progression (25-L, 60-OP). 12 pts (10%) have developed distant mets (6-L, 6-OP). 1-yr and 2-yr PFS for all pts is 77% and 64%. 12/69 OP and 9/36 L pts have died of disease. 1-yr event-free survival (EFS = no salvage surgery, recurrence or death) is 72% (77%-OP, 64%-L), and 2-yr EFS is 57% (68%-OP, 34%-L) (p = 0.02). 1-yr OS is 93%, 2-yr OS is 74% (OP vs. L p = 0.11). Conclusions: This regimen is well tolerated and is feasible in a multi-institutional setting. EFS with this regimen is lower than expected in larynx patients. The benefit of induction chemotherapy in this setting remains unproven but does not preclude CCR delivery. Funded, in part, by Bristol-Myers Squibb. [Table: see text]


2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 6039-6039
Author(s):  
D. Isla ◽  
J. Martínez-Trufero ◽  
S. Morales ◽  
A. Yubero ◽  
J. Lambea ◽  
...  

6039 Background: Sequential treatment with induction CT followed by CT/RT is highly active and under study in ongoing randomized trials. We started a pilot phase II trial to explore the efficacy, toxicity profile and organ preservation of a modified neoadjuvant TPF to concurrent CT/RT in both resectable (R) and unresectable (UR) LAHNC. Methods: One hundred seventy patients(p) with stage III-IV, PS ECOG 0–2, were included to receive 3 cycles of docetaxel 75 mg/m2 iv day(d) 1, cisplatin(P) 75 mg/m2 iv d2 and 5-FU 750 mg/m2 iv continuous infusion d2–5, every 3 weeks with prophylactic ciprofloxacin 500 mg twice daily from d6–15 of each cycle and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor as secondary or primary setting, followed by P 100 mg/m2 iv d1, 22, 43 concomitant with RT (66–70 Gy, conventional fractionation). Neck dissection was planned for p with stage N2–3 after induction CT or salvage surgery for resectable p with persistent disease at the end of treatment. Results: Main p characteristics were: median age 58 years (39–77), male 89%, ECOG 0/1/2 47%/50.6%/2.4%, stage IV 62.7%, larynx/hipopharynx/oral cavity/oropharynx 45%/12%/17.3%/25.7% and R/UR 41.8%/58.2%. Median TPF/P cycles administered were 3/3. Neoadjuvant CT/total treatment overall response rate evaluation (R/UR): 70% (73%/68%)/86% (84%/88%). Neck dissection was performed in 16 p and salvage surgery in 6 p. Organ preservation was achieved in 90.8% of R p. Main G3–4 toxicity during TPF treatment was neutropenia 11.2%, febrile neutropenia 11.2%, mucositis 11.2%, and during CT/RT mucositis 16.5%, neutropenia 16.5%. Median time to progression was 19.5 m(R:15.6, UR:20.3), and median overall survival was not reached (R:not reached, UR:32.8). Conclusions: Preliminary results indicate that modified neoadjuvant TPF followed by CT/RT is an active and well tolerated regimen in LAHNC, with satisfactory organ preservation and survival. No significant financial relationships to disclose.


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