Abstract
Combined anterior craniofacial resection (CFR) has been in use for more than 25 years. The advent of the free revascularized tissue transfer flap in l980 permitted safe resection of tumors that had spread beyond the confines of the paranasal sinuses with immediate reconstruction of the sino-orbital cranial defect. The purpose of this study was to examine the outcomes and morbidity of a management policy of primary CFR and postoperative radiotherapy for paranasal sinus cancers infiltrating the skull base over a 21-year period. Seventy-three patients with paranasal sinus cancers were treated at the Prince of Wales Hospital between l975 and l996. All were newly diagnosed with the exception of one patient who had received radiotherapy elsewhere 5 years earlier. Only 22% were early lesions and 31% were advanced (more than six sites involved). There were 59 men and 14 women. The mean age was 57 years. All but two patients had a performance status of either 0 or 1. Orbital exenteration was performed in 31 patients. Since l980, all major defects were reconstructed with free tissue transfer flaps. The 5-year cancer-specific survival (CSS) for the 73 patients was 69%, which was unchanged at 10 years. Twenty two patients died from or with their index cancer. An additional 11 patients died from unrelated causes. The actuarial overall survival (OS) at 5 and 10 years was 61% and 48%, respectively. The 5-year recurrence-free rate was 59%. The CSS for the three dominant pathologic conditions were adenocarcinoma 70%, squamous cancer 51%, and olfactory neuroblastoma 84%. The difference was not significant; however, there was a significant difference in OS, with olfactory neuroblastoma having the best prognosis. Orbital involvement, radiologic evidence of skull base erosion, and involvement of the infratemporal fossa were not poor prognostic indicators. Patients with a performance status of 0 had improved OS. There was no operative mortality. An aggressive policy of combined CFR and postoperative radiotherapy with free-flap reconstruction for large defects gave survival results that were comparable to less-advanced lesions and superior to many other treatment alternatives. There was a high exenteration rate (42%). Squamous cancers were associated with the greatest morbidity and poorest OS.
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