Abstract

We have previously described our treatment algorithm for patients with small head and neck cancers with advanced cervical metastases (stage N2 or greater). Primary radiotherapy is given to the primary site and neck, followed 6 weeks later with endoscopy and biopsy of the primary site. If biopsy of the primary site is negative by frozen section, an immediate neck dissection is performed even when no clinical residual neck disease is present. Our initial review found that 36% of patients with a complete clinical response to radiotherapy had positive nodes on histological examination. Retrospective. The medical records of 71 patients treated at UCLA Medical Center from 1986 to 1999 by this algorithm were reviewed. After radiotherapy, 69 of 71 patients had a complete response at their primary site. Forty-two patients had a complete clinical response in the neck. Seventy-one neck dissections were performed. Overall, 31 of 71 neck dissections (44%) had positive nodes. Among the 42 patients with a complete response to radiotherapy, 13 (31%) had positive histological nodes. Among the 29 patients with a partial response to radiotherapy, 17 (59%) had positive nodes. Follow-up and incidence of neck recurrence are discussed. Planned neck dissection for advanced cervical metastases remains controversial for patients with a complete clinical response to radiotherapy. However, our results suggest that clinical assessment after radiotherapy cannot assure the absence of neck disease. Until there are reliable methods to distinguish which patients are truly free of neck disease, we believe the benefits of a planned neck dissection outweigh the low morbidity of this procedure.

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