Abstract

e17521 Background: Human papillomavirus-mediated (HPV+) oropharyngeal cancer is now defined as a clinically distinct entity from HPV-unrelated (HPV-) disease in the 8th edition AJCC staging system, which more accurately informs prognosis for HPV+ patients. Treatment decisions are currently made according to the AJCC 7th ed staging. HPV+ patients are associated with favorable outcome. This study aims to analyze the national pattern of practice for HPV+ disease. Methods: Patients with oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) diagnosed from 2010-2012 were identified from the National Cancer Database (NCDB). Patients were staged using the AJCC 7th system. Chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery were counted as treatment modalities. Fisher’s exact test and chi-squared test were used to assess treatment patterns over time. Overall survival (OS) was compared with Cox proportional hazards model. Results: 5,928 HPV+ OPSCC patients were identified. Single modality (surgery or radiation) was the most common treatment choice, used in 53.6% of stage I and 48.8% of stage II patients. For stage I, the use of dual modality therapy (70.8% received surgery with radiation) decreased from 36% in 2010 to 19% in 2012 (p = 0.05), though no significant difference in OS was seen between dual modality and single modality. Dual modality with chemoradiation was the main approach for stage III (58.6%) and stage IVA (67.5%) disease. Use of trimodality decreased from 2010 to 2012 in both stage III (p = 0.03) and stage IVA (p < 0.01). Conclusions: Using a national cohort of HPV+ patients from the NCDB, we showed that single modality was the most common for stages I/II and dual modality was the mainstay for stages III/IVA. Usage of aggressive approaches (dual modality for stages I/II and trimodality for stages III/IVA) decreased over time. Prospective studies would be needed to determine the optimized therapeutic choice for HPV+ patients given favorable outcome.

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