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Multimodal Treatment of Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma in Children, Adolescents and Young Adults-Extended Follow-Up of the NPC-2003-GPOH Study Cohort and Patients of the Interim Cohort.

Tristan RömerSabrina FranzenHanna KravetsAhmed FarragAnna MakowskaHans ChristiansenMichael J EbleBeate TimmermannGundula StaatzFelix Manuel MottaghyMartina BührlenUlrich HagenahAlexander PuzikPablo Hernáiz DrieverJeanette GreinerNorbert JorchStephan TippeltDominik T SchneiderGabriele KropshoferTobias R OverbeckHolger ChristiansenTriantafyllia BrozouGabriele EscherichMartina BeckerWaltraud FriesenbichlerTobias FeuchtingerWolfram PuppeNicole Maria HeussenRalf-Dieter HilgersAnna Makowska
Published in: Cancers (2022)
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) in children and young adults has been treated within two consecutive prospective trials in Germany, the NPC-91 and the NPC-2003 study of the German Society of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology (GPOH). In these studies, multimodal treatment with induction chemotherapy, followed by radio (chemo)therapy and interferon-beta maintenance, yielded promising survival rates even after adapting total radiation doses to tumor response. The outcome of 45 patients in the NPC-2003 study was reassessed after a median follow-up of 85 months. In addition, we analyzed 21 further patients after closure of the NPC-2003 study, recruited between 2011 and 2017, and treated as per the NPC-2003 study protocol. The EFS and OS of 66 patients with locoregionally advanced NPC were 93.6% and 96.7%, respectively, after a median follow-up of 73 months. Seven patients with CR after induction therapy received a reduced radiation dose of 54 Gy; none relapsed. In young patients with advanced locoregional NPC, excellent long-term survival rates can be achieved by multimodal treatment, including interferon-beta. Radiation doses may be reduced in patients with complete remission after induction chemotherapy and may limit radiogenic late effects.
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