Abstract
The present study presents 105 patients seen at a head and neck specialist clinic with a neck gland which subsequently proved to be a non-squamous malignancy. Of the 105 patients, 50 patients were eventually found to have a tumour in the head and neck region, 30 to have a distant primary and in 25 no primary site was ever found. The majority of patients were diagnosed in the clinic after careful examination and most of the remainder were diagnosed during endoscopy/biopsy. Chest radiography was the most useful investigation for diagnosing primary tumours of the lung. The 5-year-survival for the whole group of 105 patients was 28% (95% CI 17-39). The 5-year-survival for the head and neck primary tumour group was 44% (95% CI 25-60). The median survival of patients with a distant primary tumour was only a 6 months, there was one 5-year-survivor. The median survival for those in whom the primary was never discovered was 18 months. However, a reasonable proportion of these patients survived, five being alive at 5 years. The difference between survival for the three groups was statistically significant (P < 0.001). The most common histological type was undifferentiated/anaplastic tumours (37 out of 105) and this was followed by adenocarcinoma (33 out of 105). There was a significant difference in the survival between these two groups (chi 2 = 2.02, d.f. = 1, P = NS). Multi-variate analysis suggested that survival was better in the older age group and was affected by histology (P = 0.0093, P = 0.0332 respectively). The present study suggests that the treatment of patients in whom the primary site is eventually found to be in the head and neck region is rewarding with the same survival as a similar group of patients with squamous cell carcinoma. Sixty of the group of 105 patients had excision biopsies of the neck node and this did not affect survival.
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