Litcius/Paper detail

Head and neck osteosarcomas: Analysis of treatment trends and survival outcomes in the United States (2004–2016)

Timothy Shim, Yeshwant Chillakuru, Christina Darwish, Eric Chalif, David P. Strum, Daniel A. Benito, Collin F. Mulcahy, Ashkan Monfared

2021Head & Neck25 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Head and neck osteosarcoma (HNOS) is a rare primary bone tumor with limited data to guide treatment approaches. METHODS: The NCDB was used to identify patients diagnosed with HNOS. Kaplan-Meier and Cox multivariate regression were used to examine the impact of each treatment on overall survival (OS). RESULTS: We identified 821 patients diagnosed with HNOS. Utilization of neoadjuvant chemotherapy + surgery increased from zero cases in 2004 to 24% of cases in 2016. Among surgically treated patients, 5-year OS was 55.8% (CI: 51.7-60.1%). No difference was seen in OS between each treatment cohort on multivariate analysis. However, neoadjuvant chemotherapy + surgery + adjuvant chemotherapy had improved 18-month survival compared to surgery alone (95.8% vs. 78.5%, p = 0.031). CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrated no survival benefit in perioperative chemotherapy or radiation therapy; however, short-term survival improvement in patients receiving both neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy displays promise and requires further investigation.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineChemotherapyMultivariate analysisRadiation therapyOncologyProportional hazards modelPerioperativeCohortInternal medicineHead and neck cancerOsteosarcomaSurgeryHead and neckSurvival analysisAdjuvantPathologySarcoma Diagnosis and TreatmentBone Tumor Diagnosis and TreatmentsHead and Neck Cancer Studies