Copenhagen, Denmark
Onsite/Online

ESTRO 2022

Session Item

Sunday
May 08
10:30 - 11:30
Room D3
Head & neck
Jørgen Johansen, Denmark;
Silke Tribius, Germany
Proffered Papers
Clinical
11:00 - 11:10
Unknown Primary Head and Neck SCC: a phase-4 population-based cohort study from DAHANCA
Signe Bergliot Nielsen, Denmark
OC-0434

Abstract

Unknown Primary Head and Neck SCC: a phase-4 population-based cohort study from DAHANCA
Authors:

Signe Bergliot Nielsen1, Nina Munk Lyhne2, Maria Andersen3, Jørgen Johansen4, Christian Godballe5, Hanne Primdahl6, Thomas Kjærgaard7, Jens Overgaard8

1Aarhus University Hospital, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery and Experimental Clinical Oncology, Aalborg, Denmark; 2Aalborg University Hospital, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Aalborg, Denmark; 3Aalborg University Hospital, Department of Oncology, Aalborg, Denmark; 4Odense University Hospital, Department of Oncology, Odense, Denmark; 5Odense University Hospital, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery and Audiology, Odense, Denmark; 6Aarhus University Hospital, Department of Oncology, Aarhus, Denmark; 7Aarhus University Hospital, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Aarhus, Denmark; 8Aarhus University Hospital, Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology, Aarhus, Denmark

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Purpose or Objective

Management of patients with squamous cell carcinoma metastasis of an unknown primary in the head and neck (SCC-HNCUP) remains a challenge. In Denmark, the diagnostic work-up and treatment of SCC-HNCUP is standardized and follow national guidelines provided by the DAHANCA group. However, international consensus regarding treatment strategy is lacking and so is knowledge about treatment outcome. The clinical radiotherapy (RT) target for SCC-HNCUP according to current DAHANCA guidelines involves bilateral regional lymph nodes and potential mucosal primary tumor sites. Neck dissection (ND) alone is recommended in N1-disease (UICC 7).

The aim of the current study is to evaluate the oncologic outcome in patients with SCC-HNCUP treated according to the Danish national guidelines. 

Material and Methods

Prospectively registered data was extracted from the DAHANCA database. All patients treated for SCC-HNCUP at Aalborg, Aarhus and Odense University Hospitals in the period 2014-2020 were included. The median follow-up was 35 months (IQR 44 months).

Results

A total of 177 patients were identified. 153 (86%) patients received curatively intended treatment with surgery, RT and chemotherapy, either alone or in combination. Twenty (11%) patients received palliative treatment. Four patients underwent no treatment. Sixty-one (34%) patients were treated with curatively intended RT alone, 54 (31%) received CRT with concomitant weekly cisplatin 40 mg/m2. Fourteen patients received accelerated RT with 6 fractions per week (66Gy/33fx/5½ weeks) and 108 patients received conventional RT with 5 fractions per week (66 Gy/33fx/6½ weeks). Forty-six patients treated curatively with RT/CRT concurrently received nimorazole. Forty and 25 patients had a ND prior to RT and CRT, respectively. Thirty-five patients received ND as only curative modality.

Neck node p16 status was unknown in 21 patients, negative in 78 patients and positive in 78 patients. Two patients had EBV-positive neck nodes.

A primary tumor or secondary cancer emerged in the head and neck region in 17 patients during follow-up.  Three tumors emerged in the hypopharynx, three in oral cavity and 11 in the oropharynx, of which 6 involved base of tongue.  Time to loco-regional failure varied between 2 and 62 months. In three patients, a possible primary tumor emerged outside the head and neck area (1 esophagus, 2 lung).

The 3-year OS for the total population was 72.8% (95% CI: 65.1, 79.1). For patients treated with curative intend, the OS at 3-years was 81.1% (73.4, 86.8). Three-year OS in patients with p16 positive disease treated curatively was 92.2% (82.1, 96.7), while patients with p16-negative and unknown p16 status had OS of 73.0% (60.5, 82.1) and 69.3% (31.2, 89.1), respectively.

Conclusion

Our data support that SCC-HNCUP is comparable to other head and neck cancers in terms of prognosis. Thorough multidisciplinary work-up is important in order to plan optimal curative treatment strategies for these patients.