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Is Increased Time From Diagnosis to Treatment in Advanced Hypopharynx Cancer Associated With Poorer Outcomes: A Single-Centre Analysis

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Publisher Sage Publications
Date 2019 Oct 2
PMID 31569981
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Abstract

Objective: To assess the potential influence of increased time from diagnosis to treatment on survival outcomes in patients with locoregionally advanced hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (HSCC).

Methods: Retrospective study of patients with a primary diagnosis of HSCC proposed for primary surgical treatment.

Results: The study population included a total of 121 Caucasian patients (121 males) with HSCC. Mean age at diagnosis was 60.4 years (range: 43-83 years). All patients had cT3 or cT4 hypopharyngeal tumors. The sample presented a 5-year overall survival (OS) of 59.6% and a disease-specific survival of 74.9%. Considering univariable analysis (unadjusted), duration of adjuvant treatment (T5), pN, margins, and extracapsular spread (ECS) are factors associated with poorer survival outcomes. An increase in T5 was associated with lower OS. Results revealed that T5 higher than 43 days, pN1, pN2, pN3, no free margins, and presence of ECS were associated with lower OS. These patients have 7.465 higher hazard of death.

Conclusion: This study suggests that duration of adjuvant therapy may be more important than other timing metrics from diagnosis to treatment. For locoregionally advanced HSCC, duration of adjuvant therapy after primary surgery higher than 6 weeks is an important feature for worse survival outcome. Preventing strategies in order to avoid radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy breaks should be developed and optimized.