Is bilateral radiotherapy necessary for patients with unilateral squamous cell carcinoma of unknown primary of the head and neck region?

•The risk of contralateral recurrence in unilateral cervical SCC-CUP is low.•Recurrences occur primarily in the area of previous irradiation.•We found no statistical significant difference in OS, LRC, and DMFS between bilateral and unilateral cervical radiotherapy.•Acute toxicity ≥ °2 was severe wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical and translational radiation oncology 2024-03, Vol.45, p.100713, Article 100713
Hauptverfasser: Oebel, Laura, Mayer, Arnulf, Kaufmann, Justus, Wollschläger, Daniel, Hagemann, Jan, Krüger, Maximilian, Schmidberger, Heinz
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The risk of contralateral recurrence in unilateral cervical SCC-CUP is low.•Recurrences occur primarily in the area of previous irradiation.•We found no statistical significant difference in OS, LRC, and DMFS between bilateral and unilateral cervical radiotherapy.•Acute toxicity ≥ °2 was severe with 97% while late toxicity ≥ °2 was moderate with 31% of cases. Squamous cell carcinoma of unknown primary (SCC-CUP) of the head and neck region remains a clinical challenge, with uncertainty surrounding the necessity of contralateral irradiation of cervical lymphatic drainage in cases of unilateral involvement. A retrospective study was conducted at the Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mainz, on a cohort of 50 patients with unilateral SCC-CUP of the head and neck region treated between 2005 and 2019. 30 patients received bilateral and 20 received unilateral cervical radiotherapy. The majority (n = 38, 76 %) were treated with modern IMRT/ VMAT (Intensity-modulated Radiation Therapy/ Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy) techniques. After a median follow-up of 64.5 months, locoregional recurrences occurred in 26 % of cases (n = 13/50), all of which were ipsilateral and predominantly within the volume of the previous irradiated CTV (clinical target volume) (85 %, n = 11/13). No patient treated unilaterally developed a contralateral recurrence in the neck. After 3 years, we observed 7 locoregional recurrences in the bilateral irradiated group (n = 7/30, 23 %), and 5 locoregional recurrences in the unilateral irradiated group (n = 5/20, 25 %). After 3 years, 12 patients had died in the bilateral irradiated group (n = 12/30, 40 %), and 7 in the unilateral irradiated group (n = 7/20, 35 %). 7 Patients showed distant metastases after 3 years in the bilateral irradiated group (n = 7/30, 23 %), and 2 in the unilateral irradiated group (n = 2/20, 10 %). Locoregional control (LRC) at 5 years was 66.2 % in the bilaterally irradiated group, and 70.0 % in the unilaterally irradiated group. Overall survival (OS) was 52.6 % (bilateral) and 64.0 % (unilateral). Distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS) was 74.7 % (bilateral) and 84.4 % (unilateral). No significant differences were observed in OS (p = 0.37), LRC (p = 0.91), and DMFS (p = 0.91) between the groups. Acute toxicity ≥ °2 accordingly CTCAE (Common Terminology Criteria of Adverse Events) was high with 97% while late toxicity ≥ °2 was moderate with 31%. There was no statistically significant differenc
ISSN:2405-6308
2405-6308
DOI:10.1016/j.ctro.2023.100713