Postoperative Radiation Therapy (postoperative + radiation_therapy)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Role for Postoperative Radiation Therapy in Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma of the Head and Neck,

THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 7 2004
Damon A. Silverman MD
Objective: Clarify the role for postoperative radiation for adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) of the head and neck as it relates to tumor site, T-stage, and surgical margin status. Study Design: Retrospective cohort study at an academic tertiary care hospital. Methods: A review of 129 patients with biopsy-proven ACC was performed. Previous treatment failures and nonoperative candidates were excluded, with 75 patients considered eligible for further study. Patients were grouped according to treatment modality and Kaplan-Meier estimates of overall survival, locoregional control, and distant control were compared using log-rank tests. Patients were also stratified according to tumor site, T-stage, and surgical margin status, and pair-wise comparisons of treatment outcome within each group were performed using Wald tests from Cox proportional hazards models. Results: Twenty-five patients were treated with surgery alone, and 50 were treated with surgery and postoperative radiation. There was no significant difference in outcome between treatment groups when correlated with tumor site (P = .89). However, postoperative radiation was associated with improved overall survival for advanced T-stage (T4) tumors (P = .019) and greater locoregional control for patients with microscopically positive margins (P = .018). There was no demonstrated benefit of postoperative radiation for patients with microscopically negative margins (P = .93). Conclusions: The findings of this study suggest that advanced T-stage and positive microscopic margins are important factors in determining the necessity for postoperative radiation therapy for ACC of the head and neck and that radiation therapy may not be necessary for patients with early T-stage tumors and negative surgical margins. [source]


Mucosal melanoma of the nose and paranasal sinuses, a contemporary experience from the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center

CANCER, Issue 9 2010
Mauricio A. Moreno MD
Abstract BACKGROUND: Sinonasal mucosal melanoma is a rare disease associated with a very poor prognosis. Because most of the series extend retrospectively several decades, we sought to determine prognostic factors and outcomes with recent treatment modalities. METHODS: A retrospective chart review of 58 patients treated for sinonasal melanoma at a tertiary cancer center between 1993 and 2004. The patients were retrospectively staged according to the sinonasal American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging system. Demographic, clinical and pathological parameters were identified and correlated with outcomes. RESULTS: There were 35 males and 23 females with a median age of 63 years; 56 patients were treated surgically and 33 received radiation therapy. According to Ballantyne's clinical staging system, 88% of the patients presented with stage I (local) disease. Classification by the AJCC staging classified yielded 27% of the patients with T1, 33% with T2, 21% with T3, and 19% with T4. T-stage and the degree of tumor pigmentation were associated with a worse survival (P = .0096 and P = .018, respectively), while pseudopapillary architecture was associated with a higher locoregional failure (P = .0144). Postoperative radiation therapy improved locoregional control when a total dose greater than 54 Gy was used (P = .0215), but did not affect overall survival. CONCLUSIONS: Tumor stage according to sinonasal AJCC staging system is an effective outcome predictor and should be the staging system of choice. Postoperative radiation therapy improves locoregional control when a higher dose and standard fractionations are used. Histological features such as pigmentation and pseudopapillary architecture are associated with worse outcome. Cancer 2010. © 2010 American Cancer Society. [source]


Base of skull recurrences after treatment of salivary gland cancer with perineural invasion reduced by postoperative radiotherapy

CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY, Issue 6 2009
A.M. Chen
Objectives:, To determine the effect of postoperative radiation therapy for salivary gland carcinomas in the presence of microscopic perineural invasion. Design and setting:, Retrospective review at an academic tertiary center. Participants:, One hundred and forty patients with pathological evidence of perineural invasion at the time of initial surgery for salivary gland carcinomas were analysed. Sixteen patients (11%) had major (named) nerve involvement. Ninety-four patients (67%) received postoperative radiation therapy to the primary site, and the portal films of 65 of these patients were available for review. Main outcome measures:, The incidence of skull base recurrences among patients treated by surgery with or without postoperative radiation therapy. Results:, Ten patients experienced skull base recurrences. T4 disease and the omission of postoperative radiation therapy were identified as significant predictors of skull base recurrence. Postoperative radiation therapy reduced the actuarial probability of skull base recurrence from 15% to 5% (P = 0.03). The crude rates of skull base recurrence were 6% (2/35) and 10% (3/30), respectively, for patients whose skull base were and were not confirmed to be encompassed in the irradiation field. The 5-year overall survival for patients who experienced a skull base recurrence was 19% compared to 91% for those who did not (P < 0.001). Conclusion:, The use of postoperative radiation therapy significantly reduced the incidence of skull base recurrence among salivary gland carcinoma patients with perineural invasion. Clin. Otolaryngol. 2009, 34, 539,545. [source]


Malignant tumors of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses,

HEAD & NECK: JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENCES & SPECIALTIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK, Issue 9 2002
Teri S. Katz MD
Abstract Purpose To evaluate the role of radiation therapy in patients with nasal cavity and paranasal sinus tumors. Materials and Methods Between October 1964 and July 1998, 78 patients with malignant tumors of the nasal cavity (48 patients), ethmoid sinus (24 patients), sphenoid sinus (5 patients), or frontal sinus (1 patient) were treated with curative intent by radiation therapy alone or in the adjuvant setting. There were 25 squamous cell carcinomas, 14 undifferentiated carcinomas, 31 minor salivary gland tumors (adenocarcinoma, adenoid cystic carcinoma, and mucoepidermoid carcinoma), 8 esthesioneuroblastomas, and 1 transitional cell carcinoma. Forty-seven patients were treated with irradiation alone, 25 with surgery and postoperative irradiation, 2 with preoperative irradiation and surgery, and 4 with chemotherapy in combination with irradiation with or without surgery. Results The 5-year actuarial local control rate for stage I (limited to the site of origin; 22 patients) was 86%; for stage II (extension to adjacent sites (eg, adjacent sinuses, orbit, pterygomaxillary fossa, nasopharynx; 21 patients) was 65%; and for stage III (destruction of skull base or pterygoid plates, or intracranial extension; 35 patients) was 34%. The 5-year actuarial local control rate for patients receiving postoperative irradiation was 79% and for patients receiving irradiation alone was 49% (p = .05). The 5-, 10-, 15-, and 20-year ultimate local control rates for all 78 patients were 60%, 56%, 48%, and 48%, respectively. The 5-, 10-, 15-, and 20-year cause-specific survival rates for all 78 patients were 56%, 45%, 39%, and 39%, respectively. The 5-, 10-, 15-, and 20-year absolute survival rates for all 78 patients were 50%, 31%, 21%, and 16%, respectively. Of the 67 (86%) patients who were initially seen with node-negative disease, 39 (58%) received no elective neck treatment, and 28 (42%) received elective neck irradiation. Of the 39 patients who received no elective neck treatment, 33 (85%) did not experience recurrence in the neck compared with 25 (89%) of 28 patients who received elective neck irradiation. Most patients who received elective neck irradiation (57%) had stage III disease. Twenty-one (27%) of 78 patients had unilateral blindness develop secondary to radiation retinopathy or optic neuropathy; the complication was anticipated in most of these patients, because the ipsilateral eye was irradiated to a high dose. Four patients (5%) unexpectedly had bilateral blindness develop because of optic neuropathy. All four of these patients received irradiation alone. Conclusion Surgery and postoperative radiation therapy may result in improved local control, absolute survival, and complications when compared with radiation therapy alone. Elective neck irradiation is probably unnecessary for patients with early-stage disease. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Head Neck 24: 821,829, 2002 [source]


Novel Clinical Trial Designs for Treatment of Ductal Carcinoma In Situ of the Breast with Trastuzumab (Herceptin)

THE BREAST JOURNAL, Issue 1 2007
Ricardo J. Gonzalez MD
Abstract:, Because ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) avidly expresses Her2/neu, the target of the monoclonal antibody trastuzumab, and because trastuzumab has been shown to be effective against invasive breast cancer, trastuzumab may be effective for reducing the tumor burden and abrogating or reversing the hypothesized transition from in situ to invasive disease in patients with DCIS. To test this hypothesis, a trial of neoadjuvant trastuzumab for DCIS has been opened at our institution. Because trastuzumab has been shown to act as a radiosensitizing agent for Her2/neu-overexpressing cancer and because there are currently no systemic treatments for estrogen-receptor-negative DCIS, it makes sense to investigate whether use of trastuzumab concurrently with postoperative radiation therapy improves local control of DCIS. The National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) is planning a trial to test this hypothesis. The risk of cardiac toxicity associated with the doses of trastuzumab planned for these trials (cumulative doses of 8 mg/kg for our trial and 14 mg/kg in the NSABP trial) is believed to be minimal, but the safety profile of these approaches will need to be closely monitored. [source]


Local Recurrence of Breast Cancer after Skin-Sparing Mastectomy Following Core Needle Biopsy: Case Reports and Review of the Literature

THE BREAST JOURNAL, Issue 3 2006
Juan Luis Uriburu MD
Abstract: The latest advances in diagnostic and therapeutic procedures for breast cancer have provided valuable technological breakthroughs. Yet the long-term consequences of these modern methods are still quite unclear. Such is the case for stereotactic or ultrasound-guided histologic needle biopsy and skin-sparing mastectomy. We report on three patients who presented with multicentric breast cancer diagnosed by stereotactic needle biopsy and treated by skin-sparing mastectomy. All three patients developed recurrence at the core needle entry site. Records of 58 patients with breast cancer who were treated by skin-sparing mastectomy followed by immediate reconstruction (with transverse rectus abdominis muscle [TRAM] flap or tissue expander) at the Breast Diseases Division of Buenos Aires British Hospital between December 1999 and December 2003 were reviewed retrospectively. Eleven of these patients were diagnosed by histologic needle biopsy. The mean follow-up was 28 months (range 5,60 months). Three (skin or subcutaneous) local recurrences at the needle entry site, diagnosed in a mean time of 23.6 months (16, 22, and 23 months), were reported. The three patients underwent complete resection with clear margins, radiation therapy to the "neobreast," and tamoxifen. All three patients are disease free with a mean postrecurrence follow-up of 24.3 months (30, 23, and 22 months). Based on the evidence of displacement of tumor cells and the potential nonresection of such tumor seeding at the time of skin-sparing mastectomy, as well as the poor probability of postoperative radiation therapy, we recommend surgical resection of the needle biopsy tract, including the dermal entry site, at the time of mastectomy. [source]


Reverse latissimus dorsi musculocutaneous flap for reconstruction of lumbar radiation ulcer

THE JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 8 2007
Sei-ichiro MOTEGI
ABSTRACT The surgical treatment of large, deep defects on the midline of the lower back or lumbar area comprises difficult reconstructive challenges. Various flaps have been designed to reconstruct the defect area. We herein report a 70-year-old Japanese woman with a large, deep ulcer in the midline of the lower back, caused by postoperative radiation therapy for eccrine porocarcinoma. The ulcer was successfully treated with surgical debridement followed by reverse latissimus dorsi musculocutaneous flap. This flap is reliable and useful for reconstruction of a large, deep midline defect of the lower back, having large and bulky tissue with a sufficient blood supply. [source]


Role for Postoperative Radiation Therapy in Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma of the Head and Neck,

THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 7 2004
Damon A. Silverman MD
Objective: Clarify the role for postoperative radiation for adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) of the head and neck as it relates to tumor site, T-stage, and surgical margin status. Study Design: Retrospective cohort study at an academic tertiary care hospital. Methods: A review of 129 patients with biopsy-proven ACC was performed. Previous treatment failures and nonoperative candidates were excluded, with 75 patients considered eligible for further study. Patients were grouped according to treatment modality and Kaplan-Meier estimates of overall survival, locoregional control, and distant control were compared using log-rank tests. Patients were also stratified according to tumor site, T-stage, and surgical margin status, and pair-wise comparisons of treatment outcome within each group were performed using Wald tests from Cox proportional hazards models. Results: Twenty-five patients were treated with surgery alone, and 50 were treated with surgery and postoperative radiation. There was no significant difference in outcome between treatment groups when correlated with tumor site (P = .89). However, postoperative radiation was associated with improved overall survival for advanced T-stage (T4) tumors (P = .019) and greater locoregional control for patients with microscopically positive margins (P = .018). There was no demonstrated benefit of postoperative radiation for patients with microscopically negative margins (P = .93). Conclusions: The findings of this study suggest that advanced T-stage and positive microscopic margins are important factors in determining the necessity for postoperative radiation therapy for ACC of the head and neck and that radiation therapy may not be necessary for patients with early T-stage tumors and negative surgical margins. [source]


Influence of compartmental involvement on the patterns of morbidity in soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh

CANCER, Issue 1 2009
Andreas Rimner MD
Abstract BACKGROUD: The authors sought to determine whether differences existed in patterns of outcome and morbidity between the 3 thigh compartments after limb-sparing surgery and postoperative radiation therapy (RT). METHODS: A total of 255 patients with primary soft tissue sarcoma (STS) of the thigh were identified in our sarcoma database (1982,2002). More than 80% of tumors were >5 cm, high grade, and deep; 33% had close or positive microscopic resection margins. Adjuvant RT consisted of brachytherapy alone (BRT; 63%), external beam RT alone (EBRT; 31%), or a combination of brachytherapy and EBRT (6%). There were 125 anterior, 58 medial, and 72 posterior lesions. The 3 compartments were balanced as to tumor grade, size, depth, margin status, and RT type. RESULTS: Overall local control (LC) was 89%, distant metastases-free survival (DMFS) was 61%, and overall survival (OS) was 66% at 5 years (median follow-up, 71 months). Overall rates for complications at 5 years were wound reoperation (10%), edema (13%), joint stiffness (12%), nerve damage (8%), and bone fractures (7%). Wound reoperation and edema were significantly higher for medial-compartment tumors (P = .01 and .005, respectively), whereas nerve damage occurred more frequently in posterior-compartment tumors (P < .001). There were no differences among bone fracture, joint stiffness, DMFS, or OS rates between compartments. CONCLUSIONS: Although tumor control was similar for all 3 compartments, more wound reoperation and edema were observed in the medial compartment, and more nerve damage was noted in the posterior compartment. These results may help guide decisions concerning current patients and improve the design of future treatments tailored to compartments. Cancer 2009. © 2008 American Cancer Society. [source]


Marital status, treatment, and survival in patients with glioblastoma multiforme

CANCER, Issue 9 2005
A population-based study
Abstract BACKGROUND Social factors influence cancer treatment choices, potentially affecting patient survival. In the current study, the authors studied the interrelations between marital status, treatment received, and survival in patients with glioblastoma multiforme (GM), using population-based data. METHODS The data source was the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Public Use Database, 1988,2001, 2004 release, all registries. Multivariate logistic, ordinal, and Cox regression analyses adjusted for demographic and clinical variables were used. RESULTS Of 10,987 patients with GM, 67% were married, 31% were unmarried, and 2% were of unknown marital status. Tumors were slightly larger at the time of diagnosis in unmarried patients (49% of unmarried patients had tumors larger than 45 mm vs. 45% of married patients; P = 0.004, multivariate analysis). Unmarried patients were less likely to undergo surgical resection (vs. biopsy; 75% of unmarried patients vs. 78% of married patients) and were less likely to receive postoperative radiation therapy (RT) (70% of unmarried patients vs. 79% of married patients). On multivariate analysis, the odds ratio (OR) for resection (vs. biopsy) in unmarried patients was 0.88 (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.79,0.98; P = 0.02), and the OR for RT in unmarried patients was 0.69 (95% CI, 0.62,0.77; P < 0.001). Unmarried patients more often refused both surgical resection and RT. Unmarried patients who underwent surgical resection and RT were found to have a shorter survival than similarly treated married patients (hazard ratio for unmarried patients, 1.10; P = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS Unmarried patients with GM presented with larger tumors, were less likely to undergo both surgical resection and postoperative RT, and had a shorter survival after diagnosis when compared with married patients, even after adjustment for treatment and other prognostic factors. Cancer 2005. © 2005 American Cancer Society. [source]


3465: Medical cancer therapy of lacrimal gland tumours

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2010
C LE TOURNEAU
Purpose The most common malignant epithelial cancer of the lacrimal gland is the adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC). Despite a slow growth, ACCs are ultimately associated with a poor outcome. Methods Given the rarity of this disease, there are actually no conclusive recommendations for optimal therapy of this tumor. Results Surgery and postoperative radiation therapy is commonly used in the initial local treatment of ACC of the lacrimal gland. In high-risk recurrence patients, concomitant platinum-based chemoradiation should be discussed in an attempt to enhance radiosensitivity. While encouraging responses were reported with intraarterial neoadjuvant chemotherapy, this strategy was associated with substantial toxicity and should not be recommended outside of clinical trials. In the metastatic setting, systemic therapy is the only available option if no surgery and/or radiation is feasible. Although some tumour shrinkage has been reported with intravenous chemotherapy, only dismal objective response rates were achieved. Most active drugs remain anthracyclines and platinum compounds. Drug combinations do not seem to add much efficacy. More recently, non-cytotoxic molecularly targeted agents have emerged and demonstrated significant efficacy in several tumour types. These agents modulate specific targets thought to be essential for tumour proliferation and/or angiogenesis. c-KIT, PDGFR,, EGFR, and VEGFR are transmembrane receptors with oncogenic tyrosine kinase activity that are commonly overexpressed in ACC. The use of drugs triggering these targets has been disappointing so far. Conclusion The recent identification of a hallmark gene fusion transcript thought to activate critical targets involved in apoptosis, cell cycle control, cell growth and angiogenesis, heralds new treatment promise. [source]


Base of skull recurrences after treatment of salivary gland cancer with perineural invasion reduced by postoperative radiotherapy

CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY, Issue 6 2009
A.M. Chen
Objectives:, To determine the effect of postoperative radiation therapy for salivary gland carcinomas in the presence of microscopic perineural invasion. Design and setting:, Retrospective review at an academic tertiary center. Participants:, One hundred and forty patients with pathological evidence of perineural invasion at the time of initial surgery for salivary gland carcinomas were analysed. Sixteen patients (11%) had major (named) nerve involvement. Ninety-four patients (67%) received postoperative radiation therapy to the primary site, and the portal films of 65 of these patients were available for review. Main outcome measures:, The incidence of skull base recurrences among patients treated by surgery with or without postoperative radiation therapy. Results:, Ten patients experienced skull base recurrences. T4 disease and the omission of postoperative radiation therapy were identified as significant predictors of skull base recurrence. Postoperative radiation therapy reduced the actuarial probability of skull base recurrence from 15% to 5% (P = 0.03). The crude rates of skull base recurrence were 6% (2/35) and 10% (3/30), respectively, for patients whose skull base were and were not confirmed to be encompassed in the irradiation field. The 5-year overall survival for patients who experienced a skull base recurrence was 19% compared to 91% for those who did not (P < 0.001). Conclusion:, The use of postoperative radiation therapy significantly reduced the incidence of skull base recurrence among salivary gland carcinoma patients with perineural invasion. Clin. Otolaryngol. 2009, 34, 539,545. [source]