Abstract

The authors of this study reviewed the management of 402 patients with squamous cell carcinomas of the faucial tonsil and the base of the tongue. These patients received radiation therapy at Massachusetts General Hospital and the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary from 1970 through 1993. Radiation therapy remains the treatment of choice for these lesions. Although the data from this review were not randomized, the accelerated hyperfractionated radiation therapy twice-daily program was shown to achieve significantly higher 5-year local tumor control rates and disease-specific survival rates than the conventional once-daily radiation therapy program (historical control). In patients with early tumors of the faucial tonsil (cancer stages T1 and T2), the 5-year actuarial local tumor control and disease-specific survival rates following the twice-daily radiation therapy program were 91% and 77%, respectively. In patients with advanced tumors (T3), the corresponding rates following twice-daily radiation therapy showed marked improvement and were 80% and 68%. While the treatment results for carcinoma of the base of the tongue generally were inferior to those for carcinoma of the faucial tonsil, they were still much better after the twice-daily program than after conventional once-daily irradiation. For patients with carcinoma of the base of the tongue, the local tumor control and disease-specific survival rates for T1 and T2 lesions were 85% and 76%, respectively. For T3 lesions, the corresponding rates were 54% and 53%. Extensive T4 tumors are better managed by combined surgery and postoperative irradiation. Residual metastatic nodal disease is managed by neck dissection.

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