Oncologic and survival outcomes for resectable locally-advanced HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer treated with transoral robotic surgery

•Advanced HPV+ OPSCC treated with TORS achieves survival comparable to that of early-stage tumors.•Up-front TORS allows avoidance of adjuvant chemoradiation in advanced HPV+ OPSCC.•Patients should not be excluded from consideration for TORS solely based on advanced tumor size. To determine whether u...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oral oncology 2021-07, Vol.118, p.105307-105307, Article 105307
Hauptverfasser: Yver, Christina M., Shimunov, David, Weinstein, Gregory S., Rajasekaran, Karthik, Cannady, Steven B., Lukens, John N., Lin, Alexander, Swisher-McClure, Samuel, Cohen, Roger B., Aggarwal, Charu, Bauml, Joshua M., Loevner, Laurie A., Newman, Jason G., Chalian, Ara A., Rassekh, Christopher H., Basu, Devraj, O'Malley, Bert W., Brody, Robert M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Advanced HPV+ OPSCC treated with TORS achieves survival comparable to that of early-stage tumors.•Up-front TORS allows avoidance of adjuvant chemoradiation in advanced HPV+ OPSCC.•Patients should not be excluded from consideration for TORS solely based on advanced tumor size. To determine whether up-front trans-oral robotic surgery (TORS) for clinically-staged locally-advanced human papillomavirus (HPV)-related oropharyngeal cancer is associated with oncologic and survival outcomes comparable to early-stage (cT1/T2) tumors. Retrospective cohort study of 628 patients with HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer who underwent up-front TORS from 2007 to 2017. Patients were stratified into two cohorts based on early-stage (cT1/2) versus locally-advanced (cT3/4) tumor at presentation. We identified 589 patients who presented with early-stage tumors, and 39 patients with locally-advanced tumors. Of these, 73% of patients required adjuvant radiation, and 33% required adjuvant chemoradiation. There was no significant difference in the administration of adjuvant radiation or chemoradiation between the two cohorts. Patients in the locally-advanced disease cohort were significantly more likely to have Stage II/III disease by clinical and pathologic criteria by American Joint Committee on Cancer 8th edition criteria (p 
ISSN:1368-8375
1879-0593
DOI:10.1016/j.oraloncology.2021.105307