Abstract

Forty-one patients undergoing surgery for recurrent or residual tumour following radical radiotherapy for T3N0M0 glottic carcinoma had their larynges evaluated pathologically by whole organ laryngeal sectioning. All patients had been staged initially as T3N0M0 glottic carcinoma and treated according to a protocol of radical radiotherapy (50-55 Gy in 4-5 weeks) with surgery reserved for radiation failure. Seventeen of the 41 patients died as a result of locoregional or distant recurrence or complications following surgery. Twenty-four patients were either alive or dead with intercurrent disease. Pathologic staging demonstrated 58% of these tumours to be rpT4, 29% rpT3 and the remainder rpT0-2. The incidence of major cartilage invasion, vascular or perineural invasion, and subglottic extension greater than 15 mm was more frequent in patients with locoregional recurrence than in patients without recurrence. The presence of these pathologic features had a positive predictive value of 0.78 in relation to probability of locoregional failure. In addition, there was a significant difference in the frequency of these pathologic features between patients with and without locoregional recurrence (P less than 0.001). The frequency of positive margins (19%) and pattern of involvement are described. The incidence of occult nodes (0%) in patients undergoing neck dissection is presented. The frequency (23%) and pattern of osteo-chondroradionecrosis are also described. The patterns of growth and spread observed were similar to those described previously. The importance of performing wide surgical resections in patients with recurrence following radiotherapy is emphasized.

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