Bioradiotherapy with Cetuximab May Reduce the Risk of Neck Node Relapse in Locoregionally Advanced Laryngeal Glottic Carcinoma: May HER1-Profile Be Useful in the Bioselection of Patients?
Giovanni AlmadoriAntonella ColiEugenio De CorsoStefano SettimiDario Antonio MeleFrancesca BrigatoDomenico ScannoneJacopo GalliVincenzo ValentiniGaetano PaludettiLibero LauriolaFranco Oreste RanellettiPublished in: Journal of personalized medicine (2022)
The aim of the study was to evaluate survival in patients with advanced glottic laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma treated by bioradiotherapy (BioRT) with cetuximab and eventual salvage surgery (group A, n = 66) or upfront surgery (total laryngectomy or near-total laryngectomy) with or without postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) (group B, n = 66). The predictive role of HER1 expression in the bioselection of tumors was evaluated. Relapse-free (RFS), metastasis-free (MFS), overall (OS) survivals, salvageability, and rates of larynx preservation were analyzed. The two groups were balanced by propensity score method on their baseline characteristics. No significant differences in RFS and OS were found, while MFS results were significantly higher in group A ( p = 0.04). Group A showed a 22% reduction in the probability of nodal metastasis ( p = 0.0023), mostly in tumors with higher HER1 expression. The salvageability with TL at 3 years was 54% after prior BioRT and 18% after prior upfront NTL ( p < 0.05). BioRT with cetuximab showed a reduction in the risk of lymph node relapse, particularly in the case of HER1 positive tumors, and it allowed to achieve a higher rate of functional larynx preservation and a higher salvageability compared with upfront surgery. HER1 analysis could be clinically useful in the bioselection of tumors that may benefit from BioRT with cetuximab, particularly in those with neck node metastatic propensity.
Keyphrases
- lymph node
- locally advanced
- squamous cell carcinoma
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- metastatic colorectal cancer
- free survival
- poor prognosis
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- rectal cancer
- wild type
- ejection fraction
- small cell lung cancer
- radiation therapy
- patients undergoing
- chronic kidney disease
- sentinel lymph node
- early stage
- robot assisted
- peritoneal dialysis
- long non coding rna
- binding protein
- lymph node metastasis
- coronary artery disease
- percutaneous coronary intervention