1. Parotid gland carcinoma: 32 years' experience from a single institute.
- Author
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Nakano, T, Yasumatsu, R, Kogo, R, Hashimoto, K, Asai, K, Ohga, S, Yamamoto, H, Nakashima, T, and Nakagawa, T
- Subjects
ACADEMIC medical centers ,CANCER patients ,CANCER relapse ,MEDICAL records ,ORAL surgery ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PAROTID gland tumors ,RADIOTHERAPY ,SURVIVAL ,TUMOR classification ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ACQUISITION of data methodology ,TUMOR grading - Abstract
Background: Parotid gland carcinoma is a rare and complicated histopathological classification. Therefore, assembling a sufficient number of cases with long-term outcomes in a single institute can present a challenge. Method: The medical records of 108 parotid gland carcinoma patients who were treated at Kyushu University Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan, between 1983 and 2014 were reviewed. The survival outcomes were analysed according to clinicopathological findings. Results: Forty-six patients had low clinical stage tumours (I–II), and 62 patients had high clinical stage tumours (III–IV). Fifty-two, 10 and 46 patients had low-, intermediate- and high-grade tumours, respectively. Twenty-seven of 65 cases had positive surgical margins. In high clinical stage and intermediate- to high-grade tumours, adjuvant radiation therapy was correlated with local recurrence-free survival (p = 0.0244). Intermediate- to high-grade tumours and positive surgical margins were significantly associated with disease-specific survival in multivariate analysis (p = 0.0002 and p = 0.0058). Conclusion: The results of this study show that adjuvant radiation therapy is useful for improved local control in patients with high clinical stage and intermediate- to high-grade tumours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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