P. Strojan et A. Anicin, Combined surgery and postoperative radiotherapy for cervical lymph node metastases from an unknown primary tumour, RADIOTH ONC, 49(1), 1998, pp. 33-40
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Radiology ,Nuclear Medicine & Imaging","Onconogenesis & Cancer Research
Purpose: During the 20-year period under study, 125 squamous cell carcinoma
cases were detected among 234 patients with cervical lymph node metastases
from an unknown primary tumour diagnosed in Slovenia. Fifty-eight patients
were treated by surgery and postoperative radiotherapy, 56 of whom were el
igible for follow-up and treatment evaluation.
Patients and methods: There were six females and 50 males ranging in age fr
om 33 to 81 years (median 56 years). Neck dissection was performed in 48 pa
tients, while eight patients underwent extirpation of a single lymph node m
etastasis. On histopathological examination, disease was assessed as pN1 in
six patients, pN2 in 37 patients and pN3 in 13 patients. The degree of tum
our differentiation was G1 in one patient, G2 in 26 patients, G3 in 22 pati
ents and GX in seven patients. Extracapsular tumour spread was found in 37
out of 48 examined specimens. Postoperatively, the irradiation field covere
d different sites of possible occult primary in 48 patients and in eight pa
tients it was limited to the involved side of the neck. The median tumour d
oses were 59 and 55 Gy, respectively.
Results: After a median follow-up of 8.6 years, a total of five (9%) primar
y tumours were subsequently discovered, all in the head and neck region. Tw
enty-three (41%) patients were alive without evidence of disease and 14 (25
%) patients died due to cancer-unrelated causes. Disease-related deaths occ
urred in 19 (34%) patients, the cause of death being primary tumour in thre
e patients, advanced nodal disease in 10 patients and distant metastases wi
th no evidence of persistent tumour in the head and neck region in six pati
ents. The 5- and 10-year disease-specific survival rates were 66% and 52%,
respectively, and the overall survival rates were 52% and 22%, respectively
. The patients' survival significantly correlated (P < 0.05) with extracaps
ular tumour spread and the extent of the irradiation field.
Conclusions: With acceptable toxicity, a superior control rate of neck dise
ase and survival results favourably comparable to those reported elsewhere
and obtained by a single modality approach, our study supports the use of c
ombined therapy. In patients with a poor clinical and histopathological pro
file a more aggressive treatment approach exploiting chemotherapy seems to
be justified. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.