Abstract

Awareness increases that the tumor biology influences treatment outcome and prognosis in cancer. Tumor hypoxia is thought to decrease sensitivity to radiotherapy and some forms of chemotherapy. Presence of hypoxia may be assessed by investigating expression of endogenous markers of hypoxia (EMH) using immunohistochemistry (IHC). In this systematic review we investigated the effect of EMH expression on local control and survival according to treatment modality in head and neck cancer (head and neck squamous cell carcinoma [HNSCC]). A search was performed in MEDLINE and EMBASE. Studies were eligible for inclusion that described EMH expression in relation to outcome in HNSCC patients. Quality was assessed using the Quality in Prognosis Studies (QUIPS) tool. Hazard ratios for locoregional control and survival were extracted. Forty studies of adequate quality were included. HIF-1a, HIF-2a, CA-IX, GLUT-1, and OPN were identified as the best described EMHs. With exception of HIF-2a, all EMHs were significantly related to adverse outcome in multiple studies, especially in studies where patients underwent single-modality treatment. Positive expression was often correlated with adverse clinical characteristics, including disease stage and differentiation grade. In summary, EMH expression was common in HNSCC patients and negatively influenced their prognosis. Future studies should investigate the effect of hypoxia-modified treatment schedules in patients with high In summary, EMH expression. These may include ARCON, treatment with nimorazole, or novel targeted therapies directed at hypoxic tissue. Also, the feasibility of surgical removal of the hypoxic tumor volume prior to radiotherapy should be investigated.

Highlights

  • Despite improvement of surgical and radiotherapeutic techniques, as well as the introduction of systemic therapies including cisplatin or cetuximab, 5-year survival rates for patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) remain low [1]

  • 4684 Unique hits Screening on title and abstract

  • In this review we identified several studies that show that increased endogenous markers of hypoxia (EMH) expression leads to worse locoregional control (LRC) and survival

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Summary

Introduction

Despite improvement of surgical and radiotherapeutic techniques, as well as the introduction of systemic therapies including cisplatin or cetuximab, 5-year survival rates for patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) remain low [1]. Awareness increases that not all squamous cell carcinomas are the same, but have different tumor biology [2] These differences could have an even greater impact on treatment outcome than mere clinical staging. An example is infection with the human papillomavirus (HPV) in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC): HPV-associated (HPV+) OPSCC cancers show a much better response to radio- and chemotherapy than non-HPV-associated (HPVÀ) OPSCC [3, 4]. In this line there is a clear need for other novel biomarkers to predict sensitivity to a particular treatment modality, or to identify which patients might benefit from adjuvant therapies

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