Abstract

Locally recurrent nasopharyngeal carcinoma (rNPC) after definitive IMRT occurs in 10% of all cases and represents a distinct clinical entity that has been selectively enriched by radio-resistant cancer cells. Therefore, we report of the outcomes of 77 patients who had repeat salvage-IMRT for rNPC after only a definitive course of IMRT. Various clinical outcomes were measured. Log-rank tests were used to detect differences in the survival outcomes between factor-defined subgroups. Multivariable analysis was performed using the Cox proportional hazard model. The median follow-up time was 25.7 months (range 3.0–75.7 months), measured from the time of recurrence. The median OS time and PFS time of the entire cohort was 37.0 and 20.5 months, respectively. Thirty-four patients (44.2%) died. Approximately 35% of these patients died from disease progression, but 53% were from treatment-induced severe adverse effects (SAEs) without evidence of disease progression. Higher T-classification of the recurrent tumor and the development of SAEs were found to be the only independent and significant adverse prognostic factors on multivariable analysis. These outcomes underscore the particularly virulent characteristics of rNPC after definitive IMRT. Concerning is the impact of re-irradiation toxicity on patient mortality.

Highlights

  • Local recurrence of NPC after high-dose IMRT as initial treatment represents a unique condition and its management poses a new set of challenges to clinicians

  • Previous results of salvage IMRT for NPC after conventional radiotherapy may not be as readily applicable for NPC patients initially irradiated with IMRT

  • 35% patients died from disease progression, but 53% were from

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Summary

Introduction

Local recurrence of NPC after high-dose IMRT as initial treatment represents a unique condition and its management poses a new set of challenges to clinicians. Whereas recurrences in the previous eras could have been partially attributable to the technological shortcomings of treatment delivery, the recurrence of NPC that has been fully encompassed within the high-dose irradiation volumes represent a new biologic entity that could be more radio-resistant. Normal tissues such as mucosa, temporal lobes of the brain, cavernous sinus, and www.nature.com/scientificreports/.

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