Oral Oncol
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Multicenter Study
Population attributable risk of tobacco and alcohol for upper aerodigestive tract cancer.
Tobacco and alcohol are major risk factors for upper aerodigestive tract (UADT) cancer and significant variation is observed in UADT cancer rates across Europe. We have estimated the proportion of UADT cancer burden explained by tobacco and alcohol and how this varies with the incidence rates across Europe, cancer sub-site, gender and age. This should help estimate the minimum residual burden of other risk factors to UADT cancer, including human papillomavirus. ⋯ Tobacco and alcohol together explain only about half of the total UADT cancer burden among women. Geographically, tobacco and alcohol explained a larger proportion of UADT cancer in central (PAR=84%) than southern (PAR=72%) and western Europe (PAR=67%). While the majority of the UADT cancers in Europe are due to tobacco or the joint effect of tobacco and alcohol, our results support a significant role for other risk factors in particular, for oral and oropharyngeal cancers and also for UADT cancers in southern and western Europe.
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Review Meta Analysis Comparative Study
A meta-analysis of the randomized controlled trials on elective neck dissection versus therapeutic neck dissection in oral cavity cancers with clinically node-negative neck.
There is still no consensus on the optimal treatment of the neck in oral cavity cancer patients with clinical N0 neck. The aim of this study was to assess a possible benefit of elective neck dissection in oral cancers with clinical N0 neck. A comprehensive search and systematic review of electronic databases was carried out for randomized trials comparing elective neck dissection to therapeutic neck dissection (observation) in oral cancer patients with clinical N0 neck. ⋯ Four studies with a total of 283 patients met our inclusion criteria. The results of the meta-analysis showed that elective neck dissection reduced the risk of disease-specific death (fixed-effects model RR=0.57, 95% CI 0.36-0.89, p=0.014; random-effects model RR=0.59, 95% CI 0.37-0.96, p=0.034) compared to observation. This reduction in disease-specific death rate supports the need to perform elective neck dissection in oral cancers with clinical N0 neck.
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Adult soft tissue sarcoma of the head and neck are rare and represent a heterogeneous group of tumours of different histological variants. Management of these neoplasms presents a great challenge. Malignant fibrous histiocytoma, fibrosarcoma, angiosarcoma and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumour are the most frequently found sarcoma types in the head and neck. ⋯ Survival varies from 50 to 80%. Prognostic factors are tumour grade, margin status and tumour size. With further insight into the biology of soft tissue sarcoma, modern imaging techniques and new treatment options, we will most certainly be able to improve clinical outcome in patients with soft tissue sarcoma in the upcoming years.
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Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is one of the most common cancers in geographic regions where betel quid (BQ) chewing is prevalent; OSCC is an extremely malignant neoplasm whose prognostic factors are multiple and complex. The purpose of this study was to assess clinicopathological prognostic factors and treatment outcomes in 698 consecutive OSCC patients who had undergone surgery as the primary treatment in an area with a high prevalence of both betel quid chewing and tobacco smoking. The prognostic factors were predicted using Cox's proportional-hazards regression model, and the survival rate was calculated using Kaplan-Meier analysis. ⋯ Furthermore, history of alcohol drinking, lower level of nodal metastasis, advanced stage, poor cell differentiation, and treatment failures were independent predictors of poor disease-specific survival. However, we did not find any significant factor that affected locoregional recurrence. Due to the high frequencies of locoregional recurrence and second primary cancer, our findings emphasize that aggressive surgical excision, adjuvant treatments according to clinicopathological prognostic factors and close surveillance are important to the survival of OSCC patients in an area with a high prevalence of betel quid chewing and tobacco smoking.
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Comparative Study
The free vascularized flap and the pectoralis major pedicled flap options: comparative results of reconstruction of the tongue.
Reconstruction after extensive resection of the tongue remains a surgical challenge. Free soft-tissue transfer is now favored for head and neck reconstruction following cancer resection. However, the choice of either free tissue transfer (FTT) or of the pedicled Pectoralis Major Musculocutaneous Flap (PMMF), the workhorse in head and neck reconstruction, remains controversial. ⋯ The two groups were similar in terms of patients' characteristics. The reliability of free flaps was higher than that of PMMF. The assessment of our practice in the case of extensive tongue defect suggests that reconstruction with free soft-tissue transfer, whenever feasible, should be the first-choice treatment option.