Disease outcome and associated factors after definitive platinum based chemoradiotherapy for advanced stage HPV-negative head and neck cancer

Publication date

2022-10

Authors

de Roest, Reinout H.
van der Heijden, Martijn
Wesseling, Frederik W.R.
de Ruiter, E. J.
Heymans, Martijn W.
Terhaard, Chris H.J.ORCID 0000-0001-6062-5457ISNI 0000000388691821
Vergeer, Marije R.
Buter, Jan
Devriese, Lot A
de Boer, Jan Paul

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Background: Definitive concomitant cisplatin-based chemoradiotherapy (CRT) is the current gold standard for most patients with advanced stage head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) of the pharynx and larynx. Since previous meta-analysis on CRT outcomes in HNSCC have been reported, advances have been made in radiotherapy techniques and clinical management, while HPV-status has been identified as a strong confounding prognostic factor in oropharyngeal cancer. Here, we present real-world outcome data from a large multicenter cohort of HPV-negative advanced stage HNSCC treated with CRT using contemporary IMRT-based techniques. Method: Retrospective data were collected from a multicenter cohort of 513 patients treated with definitive concurrent platinum-based CRT with curative intent between January 2009 and August 2017. Only patients with HPV-negative advanced stage (III-IV) HNSCC were included. A prognostic model for outcome was developed based on clinical parameters and compared to TNM. Results: Nearly half of the 513 patients (49%) had an oropharyngeal tumor, often locally advanced (73.3% T3-T4b) and with involvement of the regional lymph nodes (84%). Most patients (84%) received cisplatin as single agent. In total 66% received the planned number of cycles and 75% reached a cumulative cisplatin dose of ≥200 mg/m2. Locoregional control was achieved in 324 (63%) patients during follow-up, and no association with tumor sites was observed (p = 0.48). Overall survival at 5 year follow-up was 47%, with a better survival for laryngeal cancer (p = 0.02) compared to other sites. A model with clinical variables (gender, high pre-treatment weight loss, N2c/N3-stage and <200 mg/m2 dose of cisplatin) provided a noticeably stronger association with overall survival than TNM-staging (C- index 0.68 vs 0.55). Simultaneous Integrated Boosting (SIB) significantly outperformed Sequential Boosting (SEQ) to reduce the development of distant metastasis (SEQ vs SIB: OR 1.91 (1.11–3.26; p = 0.02). Conclusion: Despite advances in clinical management, more than a third of patients with HPV-negative HNSCC do not complete CRT treatment protocols due to cisplatin toxicity. A model that consists of clinical variables and treatment parameters including cisplatin dose provided the strongest association with overall survival. Since cisplatin toxicity is a major obstacle in completing definitive CRT, the development of alternative and less toxic radiosensitizers is therefore warranted to improve treatment results. The association of RT-boost technique with distant metastasis is an important finding and requires further study.

Keywords

Advanced stage, Chemoradiotherapy, Cisplatin, HNSCC, HPV-negative, Hematology, Oncology, Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging, Journal Article

Citation

de Roest, R H, van der Heijden, M, Wesseling, F W R, de Ruiter, E J, Heymans, M W, Terhaard, C, Vergeer, M R, Buter, J, Devriese, L A, de Boer, J P, Navran, A, Hoeben, A, Vens, C, van den Brekel, M, Brakenhoff, R H, Leemans, C R & Hoebers, F 2022, 'Disease outcome and associated factors after definitive platinum based chemoradiotherapy for advanced stage HPV-negative head and neck cancer', Radiotherapy & Oncology, vol. 175, pp. 112-121. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2022.08.013