Publication

Impact of human papillomavirus on outcome in patients with oropharyngeal cancer treated with primary surgery

Journal Paper/Review - Jul 10, 2017

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Broglie Däppen M, Müller M, Spreitzer S, Lang F, Lutchmaya M, Stauffer E, Espeli V, Martucci F, Bongiovanni M, Foerbs D, Arnoux A, Dettmer M, Arnold A, Stöckli S, Sauter R, Pasche P, Reinhard A, de Leval L, Huber G, Pezier T, Soltermann A, Giger R, Jochum W. Impact of human papillomavirus on outcome in patients with oropharyngeal cancer treated with primary surgery. Head & neck 2017; 39:2004-2015.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Head & neck 2017; 39
Publication Date
Jul 10, 2017
Issn Electronic
1097-0347
Pages
2004-2015
Brief description/objective

BACKGROUND
Knowledge about prognostic factors in surgically treated patients with oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is limited. The purpose of this study was to identify influential factors on survival in a large cohort of patients with surgically treated oropharyngeal SCC.

METHODS
Retrospective analysis of survival estimates in patients with surgically treated oropharyngeal SCC using tumoral positivity for human papillomavirus (HPV) and risk-of-death categories according to a study from 2010 as stratification factors.

RESULTS
The 5-year overall survival (OS) and disease-specific survival (DSS) rates after surgery alone were higher in HPV-associated oropharyngeal SCC (OS 80% vs 62%; P = .01; DSS 92% vs 76%; P = .03). Patients in the low-risk category had higher survival rates (OS 91%; DSS 99%) than patients in the intermediate-risk group (OS 63%; DSS 83%), and high-risk group (OS 61%; DSS 75%).

CONCLUSION
Nonsmokers with HPV-positive oropharyngeal SCC have a better prognosis than smokers with HPV-positive oropharyngeal SCC and also than patients with HPV-negative tumors when treated by surgery alone.