Abstract

Purpose : To determine the efficacy of intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) for patients with advanced or recurrent head and neck cancer. Methods and Materials : Intraoperative radiation therapy was given at 30 sites in 25 patients using a 6–18 MeV electron beam with or without conventional external beam irradiation. A single dose of 10–30 Gy was delivered after surgical resection. Sites treated with IORT were classified into three types after surgical resection: gross residual disease (GR, n = 7), microscopic residual disease (MR, n = 12), and close margin (CM, n = 11). Local control rate, patterns of recurrence, survival rate, and complications were analyzed. Results : The 2-year cumulative local control rate within the IORT port was 54.1% for all cases, 0% for GR, 54.5% for MR, and 81.8% for CM. There were significant differences between GR and MR ( p < 0.05), and GR and CM ( p < 0.01). The majority of the failures inside the IORT port were associated with recurrence outside the port. Distant metastases occurred in five patients. Four of these had GR. The 2-year cumulative survival rate was 45.1 % for all, 0% for GR, 33.0% for MR, and 70.0% for CM. Five patients (22%) experienced late complications. The 2-year cumulative complication rate was 32.8%. Four sites developed osteoradionecrosis and three developed carotid artery blowout. Incidence of complications increased when patients received over 20 Gy with a single dose of IORT. Conclusions : Considering both therapeutic ratio and patterns of failure, it is not suitable to treat patients with gross residual disease with IORT. We could not firmly determine the therapeutic value of IORT for patients with microscopic residual disease and close margin. For this subset, further study of moderate dose (less than 20 Gy) IORT combined with adequate postoperative irradiation is needed.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call