Purpose: Chemoradiation is increasingly becoming the standard of care for node-positive squamous cell cancer of the head and neck. Response to chemoradiation for clinically node-positive disease in the neck is often difficult to ascertain because clinical response may or may not be predictive of pathological response. This often leads to uncertainty about the necessity of a functional neck dissection after chemoradiation. In this study, we retrospectively analyzed a cohort of node-positive patients to examine pathological response as well as clinical outcome after chemoradiation with or without functional neck dissection.
Methods: Using the radiation oncology records from 1993 until 2003, a population of 420 patients with squamous cell cancer of the head and neck were identified. Of these, 34 patients were clinically node positive at the time of diagnosis and under went chemoradiation as their primary therapy. All patients received a concurrent platinum-based regimen. Median radiation dose to gross neck disease was 68.4 Gy (range: 50.4-73.8 Gy).
Results: Median follow-up time was 25 months (range: 4-88 months). Patients with a complete response (17/34, 50%) after receiving 50 Gy finished the full course of therapy but did not undergo functional neck dissection. Only one patient (1/17) in this observation group experienced relapse in the neck. Patients with a partial response who received 50 Gy (17/34) completed therapy and under went functional neck dissection, regardless of response at the end of therapy. Fifty percent (3/6) with positive pathology had a regional relapse in the neck, whereas only 1/11 patients with negative pathology relapsed in the neck. This result compared favorably with those who were observed after chemoradiation.
Conclusions: Clinical response at 50 Gy can be an effective means of selecting patients for functional neck dissection. Patients with complete response at 50 Gy may be observed with a low regional recurrence rate. Those patients with a partial response should undergo adjuvant neck dissection.