Nasopharyngeal carcinomas : prognostic factors and treatment features

Joint Authors

Aribas, Bilgin Kadri
Cetindag, Fayiq
Ozdogan, Zafir
Dizman, Aysin
Demir, Pelin
Unlu, Dilek Nil
Yologlu, Zeynel

Source

Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute

Issue

Vol. 20, Issue 3 (30 Sep. 2008), pp.230-236, 7 p.

Publisher

Cairo University National Cancer Institute

Publication Date

2008-09-30

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

7

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Purpose : We retrospectively evaluated the clinical, radiological and pathological features determining the prognosis of patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma in Ankara Oncology Hospital, Turkey.

Material and Methods : Two hundred and fifty-nine patients, 74 women and 185 males with nasopharyngeal carcinoma were treated between 1993 and 2008.

All imaging data including CT and MRI were reevaluated according to the criteria which determine parapharyngeal, oropharyngeal, nasal, skull-base (bone)/sinus, infratemporal fossa, orbit, intracranial involvements and lymph node metastasis by our radiologists.

The patients were restaged using the AJCC 2002 classification with these new radiological findings and clinical data base.

We evaluated prognostic factors using univariate Kaplan- Meier and multivariate Cox regression analyses.

Gender, age (40-year cut-off), histology, T- and N-stage, tumor size, regional involvement, radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy and response to therapy were studied as variables.

Results : Five-year disease-free and overall survival rates were 45±4% and 72±3%, respectively.

We found that age, gender, WHO type, radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy, N-stage and response to therapy were significant prognostic factors on disease-free survival and overall survival.

In the chemo-radiotherapy group, we did not detect any survival difference between patients given four or fewer chemotherapy courses.

Conclusions : Radiotherapy improved survival but chemotherapy, in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant setting, had no added effect to radiotherapy.

N-stage and response to treatment were the most important independent predictors on survival.

Age, gender, type, therapy and bone/sinus involvement were among the predictive factors on multivariate analysis, as well.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Aribas, Bilgin Kadri& Cetindag, Fayiq& Ozdogan, Zafir& Dizman, Aysin& Demir, Pelin& Unlu, Dilek Nil…[et al.]. 2008. Nasopharyngeal carcinomas : prognostic factors and treatment features. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute،Vol. 20, no. 3, pp.230-236.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355884

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Aribas, Bilgin Kadri…[et al.]. Nasopharyngeal carcinomas : prognostic factors and treatment features. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute Vol. 20, no. 3 (Sep. 2008), pp.230-236.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355884

American Medical Association (AMA)

Aribas, Bilgin Kadri& Cetindag, Fayiq& Ozdogan, Zafir& Dizman, Aysin& Demir, Pelin& Unlu, Dilek Nil…[et al.]. Nasopharyngeal carcinomas : prognostic factors and treatment features. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute. 2008. Vol. 20, no. 3, pp.230-236.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355884

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 236

Record ID

BIM-355884