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1.
Oral Oncol ; 135: 106210, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36306673

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Oral tongue carcinomas represent more than half of the tumors arising in the oral cavity, a site with a high cancer specific mortality and impact on quality of life. Current guidelines are lacking for a standardized surgical approach of these tumors. The aim of this study is to compare two currently adopted surgical strategies, compartmental surgery (CTS) and wide local excision (WLE), with loco-regional control as the main oncological endpoint. MATERIALS AND METHODS: An observational retrospective multicentric study was carried out enrolling a cohort of patients affected by oral tongue or floor of the mouth squamous cell carcinoma and surgically treated in 4 international tertiary referral centers. Survival analysis was performed by propensity-score matching approach and multivariable Cox regression analysis. RESULTS: A cohort of 933 patients was enrolled. CTS was applied in 113 patients (12.1%) and WLE in 820 (87.9%). Analyzing a propensity-score matched cohort (98 CTS vs. 172 WLE) and applying a survival multivariable modeling strategy on the whole cohort, both confirmed that CTS and WLE are comparable and oncologically safe. Parameters such as number of positive lymph nodes, depth of invasion, and lymphovascular invasion still represent the key prognosticators. CONCLUSION: The main goals for surgical resection of oral cancer remain its three-dimensional circumferential clearance with adequate margins and en-bloc removal of the tumor-lymph node tract, independently of the technique adopted (CTS or WLE). Further prospective studies including quality of life evaluation are needed to better understand if one of these approaches can provide superior functional outcomes.


Subject(s)
Mouth Neoplasms , Tongue Neoplasms , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Prospective Studies , Quality of Life , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Tongue/pathology , Margins of Excision , Tongue Neoplasms/surgery , Tongue Neoplasms/pathology , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/pathology , Mouth Floor/pathology , Neoplasm Staging
2.
Indian J Surg Oncol ; 12(1): 100-107, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33814839

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to develop a speech intelligibility tool in Malayalam, an Indian language, based on the perceptual analysis. The tool had components of vowel, consonant, word, passage, and overall intelligibility. After face and content validation, a sample of 30 consecutive oral cancer patients underwent preliminary testing for internal consistency, inter- and intra-rater reliability, concurrent, and known-group validity. Subsequent validation was done in 80 T1-T4 patients from two centers. The scale had a high level of internal consistency; the Cronbach's alpha was 0.847 and good intra-rater and inter-rater agreement amongst all raters. There was a strong correlation between the Malayalam and the English passage. Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.646 proved concurrent validity. On known-group and subsequent validation, the tool showed expected differences between the treatment groups. The speech tool proved to be reliable and valid for perceptual evaluation of speech intelligibility in oral cancer patients.

3.
Eur J Cancer ; 150: 33-41, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33887515

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: We aimed to compare the predictive performance of pN-categories in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) encompassing the most recent 8th edition (TNM8), its predecessor (TNM7), and a newly proposed algorithm (pN-N+), which classifies patients according to the number of positive lymph nodes and extranodal extension. METHODS: Consecutive, primary OSCC patients from seven previously published cohorts were included and classified according to the three pN-classifications: TNM7, TNM8 and pN-N+. Overall survival probabilities were summarised with the Kaplan-Meier method. We added each of the three metrics to a Cox regression adjusted for pT-category, lymph nodal yield, age, sex, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and trained these models in one institution. We evaluated the predictive performance in the remaining six institutions and assessed the predicted 5-year risk of death using the area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC) and Brier scores. RESULTS: All 1,905 included patients were classified according to TNM7 and pN-N+. A subset of 1,575 patients was additionally classified according to TNM8, leading to upstaging in 27.0%. The pN-N+ ranked overall best determined by the obtained AUC and Brier scores. In contrast to pN-N+, TNM7 and TNM8 both suffered from disproportionate patient distribution across pN-categories and poor pN-categorial discrimination on overall survival. CONCLUSIONS: The TNM8 pN-classification designates a larger subset to more advanced disease stages but failed to show improvement of its predictive performance compared to TNM7. The pN-categories of TNM7/8 are disproportionate and inconsistently discriminated. The pN-N+ conveyed the best measures of prognosis and should be considered in future TNM iterations.


Subject(s)
Decision Support Techniques , Lymph Nodes/pathology , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/pathology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Algorithms , Biopsy , Female , Humans , Lymphatic Metastasis , Male , Middle Aged , Mouth Neoplasms/mortality , Mouth Neoplasms/therapy , Neoplasm Staging , Predictive Value of Tests , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/mortality , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/therapy , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
4.
Head Neck ; 43(4): 1043-1055, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33529403

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Nomograms applying the 8th edition of the TNM staging system aimed at predicting overall (OS), disease-specific (DSS), locoregional recurrence-free (LRRFS) and distant recurrence-free survivals (DRFS) for oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC) are still lacking. METHODS: A training cohort of 438 patients with OTSCC was retrospectively enrolled from a single institution. An external validation set of 287 patients was retrieved from two independent institutions. RESULTS: Internal validation of the multivariable models for OS, DSS, DRFS and LRRFS showed a good calibration and discrimination results with optimism-corrected c-indices of 0.74, 0.75, 0.77 and 0.70, respectively. The external validation confirmed the good performance of OS, DSS and DRFS models (c-index 0.73 and 0.77, and 0.73, respectively) and a fair performance of the LRRFS model (c-index 0.58). CONCLUSIONS: The nomograms herein presented can be implemented as useful tools for prediction of OS, DSS, DRFS and LRRFS in OTSCC.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell , Head and Neck Neoplasms , Tongue Neoplasms , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/pathology , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/therapy , Humans , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local , Neoplasm Staging , Nomograms , Prognosis , Retrospective Studies , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck , Tongue Neoplasms/pathology , Tongue Neoplasms/therapy , United States
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