Survival following primary surgery for oral cancer

SN Rogers, JS Brown, JA Woolgar, D Lowe… - Oral oncology, 2009 - Elsevier
SN Rogers, JS Brown, JA Woolgar, D Lowe, P Magennis, RJ Shaw, D Sutton, D Errington…
Oral oncology, 2009Elsevier
The main aims of this article are to report the overall and disease-specific survival of a
consecutive series of patients presenting with oral cancer from 1992 to 2002 and to relate
survival to clinical and pathological factors. The article uses population-based age-sex
mortality rates in the North-West of England to highlight differences in overall and disease-
specific survival. 541 patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma presented to the Regional
Maxillofacial Unit from 1992 to 2002. Curative treatment favoured radical primary surgery …
The main aims of this article are to report the overall and disease-specific survival of a consecutive series of patients presenting with oral cancer from 1992 to 2002 and to relate survival to clinical and pathological factors. The article uses population-based age-sex mortality rates in the North-West of England to highlight differences in overall and disease-specific survival. 541 patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma presented to the Regional Maxillofacial Unit from 1992 to 2002. Curative treatment favoured radical primary surgery, 10% (52) received primary radiotherapy. These patients were on average 8 years older with more advanced tumours and overall poorer survival at 5 years, 23% (SE 7%). The remainder of the results refer to 489 patients who had primary curative surgery, 40% (194) of whom received adjuvant radiotherapy. The overall survival (OS) was 56% (SE 2%) and the disease-specific survival (DSS) was 74% (SE 2%). There was a local recurrence rate of 10% (50) and the loco-regional recurrence rate was 21% (103). The second primary rate was 7% (35). Survival figures had improved over the 10-year period from 63% DSS for the first 4 years of the study (1992–1995) compared to 81% for the last 3 years (2000–2002). In stepwise Cox regression the two predictors selected for disease-specific survival were pN status and margins (both p<0.001). Age-sex mortality rates for the North-West indicate that 15.0% of the 489 primary surgery patients might have been expected to die within 5 years if they were typical of the general population and the observed difference between all causes and oral-cancer specific survival was 18.3%. These data emphasise the value of disease-specific survival as an indicator of successful treatment in a cohort that tends to be elderly, from social deprived backgrounds, with life styles and comorbidity that influence overall survival.
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