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Impact of esthesioneuroblastoma treatment delays on overall patient survival

Authors :
Kotaro Tsutsumi
Khwaja H. Ahmed
Khodayar Goshtasbi
Sina J. Torabi
Ahmed Mohyeldin
Frank P.K. Hsu
Edward C. Kuan
Source :
The Laryngoscope. 133:764-772
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

To characterize clinical factors associated with esthesioneuroblastoma treatment delays and determine the impact of these delays on overall survival.Retrospective database analysis.The 2004-2016 National Cancer Database was queried for patients with esthesioneuroblastoma managed by primary surgery and adjuvant radiation. Durations of diagnosis-to-treatment initiation (DTI), diagnosis-to-treatment end (DTE), surgery-to-RT initiation (SRT), radiotherapy treatment (RTD), and total treatment package (TTP) were analyzed. The cohort was split into two groups for each delay interval using the median time as the threshold.A total of 814 patients (39.6% female, 88.5% white) with mean ± SD age of 52.6 ± 15.1 years who underwent both esthesioneuroblastoma surgery and adjuvant radiotherapy were queried. Median DTI, DTE, SRT, RTD, and TTP were 34, 140, 55, 45, and 101 days, respectively. A significant association was identified between increased regional radiation dose above 66 Gy and decreased DTI (OR = 0.54, 95% CI 0.35-0.83, p = 0.01) and increased RTD (OR = 3.94, 95% CI 2.36-6.58, p 0.001) durations. Chemotherapy administration was linked with decreased SRT (OR = 0.64, 95% CI 0.47-0.89, p = 0.01) and TTP (OR = 0.59, 95% CI 0.43-0.82, p = 0.001) durations. Cox proportional-hazards analysis revealed that increased RTD was associated with decreased survival (HR = 1.80, 95% CI 1.26-2.57, p 0.005), independent of age, sex, race, regional radiation dose, facility volume, facility type, insurance status, modified Kadish stage, chemotherapy status, Charlson-Deyo comorbidity index, and surgical margins.Delays during, and prolongation of radiotherapy for esthesioneuroblastoma appears to be associated with decreased survival.4 Laryngoscope, 2022.

Subjects

Subjects :
Otorhinolaryngology

Details

ISSN :
15314995 and 0023852X
Volume :
133
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Laryngoscope
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....67aaf93d147e79f2d087d1db3ed2d90d