Abstract

BackgroundPatients with resected oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC) are often treated with adjuvant radiation (RT) ± concomitant chemotherapy based on pathological findings. Standard RT volumes include all surgically dissected areas, including the tumour bed and dissected neck. RT has significant acute and long-term toxicities including odynophagia, dysphagia, dermatitis and fibrosis.The goal of this study is to assess the rate of regional failure with omission of radiation to the surgically dissected pathologically node negative (pN0) hemi-neck(s) compared to historical control, and to compare oncologic outcomes, toxicity, and quality of life (QoL) profiles between standard RT volumes and omission of RT to the pN0 neck.MethodsThis is a multicentre phase II study randomizing 90 patients with T1–4 N0–2 OCSCC with at least one pN0 hemi-neck in a 1:2 ratio between standard RT volumes and omission of RT to the pN0 hemi-neck(s). Patients will be stratified based on overall nodal status (nodal involvement vs. no nodal involvement) and use of concurrent chemotherapy. The primary endpoint is regional failure in the pN0 hemi-neck(s); we hypothesize that a 2-year regional recurrence of 20% or less will be achieved. Secondary endpoints include overall and progression-free survival, local recurrence, rate of salvage therapy, toxicity and QoL.DiscussionThis study will provide an assessment of omission of RT to the dissected pN0 hemi-neck(s) on oncologic outcomes, QoL and toxicity. Results will inform the design of future definitive phase III trials.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03997643. Date of registration: June 25, 2019, Current version: 2.0 on July 11 2020.

Highlights

  • Patients with resected oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC) are often treated with adjuvant radiation (RT) ± concomitant chemotherapy based on pathological findings

  • Adjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy concurrent with radiotherapy is at the discretion of the treating medical oncologist, and is recommended for patients with positive margins or extranodal extension (ENE)

  • Patients with OCSCC at increased risk of recurrence are often treated with Postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) (± chemotherapy)

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with resected oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC) are often treated with adjuvant radiation (RT) ± concomitant chemotherapy based on pathological findings. The goal of this study is to assess the rate of regional failure with omission of radiation to the surgically dissected pathologically node negative (pN0) hemi-neck(s) compared to historical control, and to compare oncologic outcomes, toxicity, and quality of life (QoL) profiles between standard RT volumes and omission of RT to the pN0 neck. Patients with resected squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity (OCSCC) are at risk of locoregional failure recurrence (LRR), at either the tumour surgical bed or in the neck. Patients with high-risk features are generally offered concurrent chemotherapy with PORT, based on a post-hoc analysis two of randomized trials [5,6,7]. Retrospective series and comparisons with historical controls have shown reductions in LRR and improvement in overall survival (OS) with PORT [11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18]

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