Objective: To evaluate the treatment outcome for sino-nasal carcinomas in Denmark from 1995-2004 and compare the results to the previous Danish survey covering 1982-1991.
Design: Retrospective follow-up.
Materials and methods: In the five Danish head and neck oncology centres, charts of all consecutive patients with sino-nasal carcinomas were reviewed and data extracted to a common database. Altogether 242 patients from the period 1995-2004 were identified. Of these 162 (67%) were male and 80 (33%) female. Histologies included squamous cell carcinoma (55%), adenocarcinoma (28.5%), adenoid-cystic carcinoma (5.0%), undifferentiated carcinoma (4.5%), transitiocellular carcinoma (1.7%), mucoepidermoid carcinoma (0.8%), neuroendocrine carcinoma (2.5%), small cell carcinomas (1.2%) and carcinomas not otherwise specified (0.8%). Treatments included radiotherapy alone 79 (33%), surgery alone 29 (12%), combined surgery and radiotherapy 96 (40%), palliative/no treatment 38 (16%). A total of 204 (86%) patients were treated with curative intent.
Results: Of the 204 patients treated with curative intent, 94 (46%) relapsed. Most failures were in T-site (63, 30%). N-site failures were 10 (5%) and M-site failures six (3%). Failure occurring in T+N-site, T+M-site, N+M-site and T+N+M-site were seven (3%), two (1%), one (0.5%) and five (3%) respectively. The 5-year actuarial local, nodal and loco-regional control rates were 55 + or - 4%, 86 + or - 3%, 49 + or - 4%, respectively. The overall 5-year actuarial survival rate for the entire cohort was 47 + or - 3%, and the corresponding cancer-specific 5-year actuarial survival rate was 57 + or - 3%. Female gender, nasal cavity tumour, adenocarcinoma and low clinical stage were significant positive prognostic factors in univariate analysis. A Cox multivariate analysis showed that only tumour site and clinical stage were independent significant prognostic factors.
Conclusion: The current series has confirmed stage and tumour site as independent prognostic factors. Compared to the previous Danish survey covering the period 1982-1991, the overall survival and cancer-specific survival rates have improved significantly.