In patients with advanced unresectable squamous-cell carcinoma of the head and neck, chemotherapy alternating with radiotherapy increases the median survival and doubles the probability of survival for three years as compared with radiotherapy alone. However, since local disease cannot be controlled in over half the patients who receive the combined treatment and since almost two thirds die within three years, further improvements in management are necessary.
Between 1983 and 1986, the National Institute for Cancer Research in Genoa and affiliated institutions conducted a randomized study to compare two different ways of combining chemotherapy (CT) and radiation therapy (RT). One hundred sixteen patients were randomized to receive neoadjuvant CT followed by definitive RT (treatment arm A) or alternating CT and RT. In treatment arm A, RT consisted of 70 Gy to the involved areas and 50 Gy to the uninvolved neck at 2 Gy/fraction, five fractions per week. In treatment arm B, RT consisted of 60 Gy to involved areas and 50 Gy to the uninvolved neck in three courses of 20 Gy each, 2 Gy/fraction, ten fractions/2 weeks alternated with four courses of CT. CT consisted of vinblastine 6 mg/m2 intravenously followed 6 hours later by bleomycin 30 IU intramuscularly, day 1; methotrexate 200 mg intravenously, day 2; leucovorin rescue, day 3. CT was repeated every 2 weeks up to four courses. The same CT was used in both treatment arms of the study. Fifty-five patients were entered in treatment arm A and 61 in treatment arm B. Complete responses were 7/48 and 19/57 in treatment arms A and B, respectively (P less than 0.03). Four-year progression-free survival was 4% in treatment arm A and 12% in treatment arm B (P less than 0.02), and four-year survival was 10% in A and 22% in B (P less than 0.02). Mucosal tolerance was significantly worse in treatment arm B (P less than 0.00004). The subgroup analysis shows the major improvement of alternating CT and RT in patients with the worst prognostic characteristics.
The goals of the treatment of paranasal sinuses mucocele are the relief of the symptoms due to compression and the prevention of recurrence. Because of the benignity of the pathology, it is mandatory to choose the approach that minimizes the surgical trauma. When an anterior clinoid mucocele is found, the conventional approaches are the trans-nasoethmoidal, the subtemporal or the pterional ones: we think that as a really mini-invasive approach, the transnasal endoscopy may be proposed. Anterior clinoid localization may be reached by a trans-sphenoidal way and treated by endoscopic microsurgery with a very low morbility. This paper deals with a case of anterior clinoid mucocele treated by this way with good anatomic and functional results and stresses the importance of the pre-operative imaging (CT/MR) allowing one to make a sure diagnosis and to choose the cases suitable for this surgical approach.
Head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma (HN-SCC) patient management is mainly based on TNM classification and needs be improved by considering other potentially useful prognostic factors. We examined the pre-radiotherapy tumor potential doubling time (Tpot) evaluated after in vivo infusion of bromodeoxyuridine and flow-cytometric analysis and the early clinical tumor regression after 40 Gy (40 Gy-TR). Tpot values and clinical 40 Gy-TR classes (minor and major) were available for 82 HN-SCC patients. Radiation therapy completion was done either with 1 dose per day (conventional regimen) or 2 doses per day (accelerated regimen). Local control was also available for follow-up times above 4 years. We found that major 40 Gy-TR was strongly correlated with fast tumor growth, characterized by Tpot values below 5 days, and that patients with major 40 Gy-TR showed better local control than those with minor 40 Gy-TR, independently from the radiotherapy regimen type. We also found that treatment completion with accelerated radiotherapy gave better local control for patients with major 40 Gy-TR and fast tumor growth than conventional radiotherapy. Multivariate analysis, performed on all patients, assigned an independent prognostic value to Tpot, tumor classification and 40 Gy-TR.
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