Abstract

Cervical lymph node metastasis is the most common recurrence pattern of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), and it is usually treated with radiation therapy and/or neck dissection. There has long been a desire for markers useful in predicting radiosensitivity to enable assignment of patients with recurrent head and neck cancer to clinical trials to improve their survival rates and quality of life. A total of 43 cases of HNSCC treated with whole or elective neck irradiation (total dose, 26-70 Gy; median, 60 Gy) for recurrent metastatic SCC in neck lymph nodes after neck dissection between 1992 and 1999 were the subject of this study. The relationship between radiosensitivity and clinicopathological and histopathological factors, including the Ki-67-labeling index for cell proliferation, p53 immunoreactivity and microvessel density (MVD), in surgical neck lymph node specimens were investigated by univariate and multivariate analysis. Of the 43 patients, 31 had recurrent tumors in neck lymph nodes after radiotherapy. Univariate analysis revealed significant associations between radiosensitivity and both high grade of keratinization (p=0.033) and low MVD (p=0.004), and marginally significant associations between radiosensitivity and grade of differentiation of the cancer in the lymph nodes (p=0.070). Multivariate analysis showed that only MVD had predictive value (p=0.016). Tumors with a high MVD possessed a significantly better neck control rate than tumors with a low MVD (p=0.004) by Kaplan-Meier analysis. MVD can be used as a good predictive marker for radiosensitivity of metastatic HNSCCs in cervical lymph nodes after neck dissection.

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