## Abstract __Background.__ Merkel cell carcinoma is a relatively rare neuroendocrine carcinoma of the skin. It arises in the head and neck region in approximately 50% of cases. Its aggressive behavior predisposes patients to localβregional recurrence and distant metastases after surgical excision
Radical radiotherapy for T4 carcinoma of the skin of the head and neck: A multivariate analysis
β Scribed by W. Robert Lee; William M. Mendenhall; James T. Parsons; Rodney R. Million
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 434 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1043-3074
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Sixty-seven patients with 68 stage T4 carcinomas of the skin of the head and neck were treated with radical radiotherapy at the University of Florida between October 1964 and November 1989. Thirty-three lesions were previously untreated and 35 were recurrent. Twenty-nine lesions were squamous cell carcinomas, 37 were basal CBII carcinomas, and 2 were basosquamous carcinomas. Minimum follow-up was 2 years. The 5-year local control, local control including surgical salvage, and cause-specific survival probabilities were 53%, 74%, and 75%, respectively. Local control rates with radiotherapy alone were poorer in patients with recurrent lesions (41% vs. 67%, p = .07) or bone involvement (40% vs. 62%, p = .08).
Results were analyzed by multivariate methods using local control, local control with surgical salvage, and cause-specific survival as endpoints. The parameters analyzed were histology; size of primary lesion; previous treatment (previously untreated vs. recurrent); involvement of bone, nerve, or cartilage; and skeletal muscle invasion. Three important prognostic factors were identified, each predictive of poorer ultimate local control and cause-specific survival rates: (a) bone involvement (p < .Ol); (b) recurrent lesions (p < .Oi); and (c) nerve involvement Radiotherapy alone can control advanced carcinomas of the skin of the head and neck, although lesions that have recurred (JJ < .02).
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Basaloid squamous cell carcinoma (BSCC) of the head and neck is a recently described high-grade variant of squamous cell carcinoma. It is a biologically virulent neoplasm with a propensity for nodal, as well as systemic, metastases. Because of the limited number of published reports, we reviewed dat
## Abstract ## Objectives/Hypothesis: To discuss the role of radiotherapy (RT) in the treatment of cutaneous squamous and basal cell carcinomas of the head and neck. ## Methods: Review of the pertinent literature. ## Results: The likelihood of cure with a good cosmetic outcome is high for pati
## Abstract ## Background. To define the role of planned neck dissection after definitive radiotherapy for patients with nodeβpositive squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. ## Methods. Review of the pertinent literature. ## Results. Radiotherapy alone produces a relatively high likelih
Between October 1964 and June 1990, 243 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the tonsillar region were treated with continuous-course radical radiotherapy at the University of Florida. All patients had a minimum 2-year follow-up. Patients were staged according to the AJCC system; stage IV was st
## Abstract ## Background Perineural invasion is observed in a small subset of patients with carcinomas of the skin of the head and neck. ## Methods Review of the patient literature highlighting the University of Florida experience. ## Results Patients with early perineural invasion are asympt