Abstract

A study was made of the intrinsic radiosensitivity of 140 biopsy and surgical specimens of malignant head and neck tumours of different histologies. Using a soft-agar clonogenic assay, the material was assessed for the ability to grow in culture (colony-forming efficiency; CFE) and inherent tumour radiosensitivity (surviving fraction at 2 Gy, SF2). The success rate for obtaining growth was 74% (104/140) with a mean CFE of 0.093% (median 0.031) and a range of 0.002-1.3%. SF2 was obtained for 88 of 140 specimens, representing a success rate of 63% with a mean SF2 of 0.48 (median 0.43) and a range of 0.10-1.00. There were no significant differences in radiosensitivity between different sites of the head and neck region. There were no significant relationships between SF2 and disease stage, nodal status, tumour grade, patient age, primary tumour growth pattern and CFE. The results were compared with those for other tumour types previously analysed with the same assay. The distribution of the SF2 values for the head and neck tumours was similar to that for 145 cervix carcinomas and there was no significant difference in mean radiosensitivity between the two tumour types. Also, there was no significant difference in radiosensitivity between head and neck tumours and either breast or colorectal cancers. However, a group of eight lymphomas was significantly more radiosensitive. These results confirm the feasibility of carrying out radiosensitivity measurements using a soft-agar clonogenic assay on head and neck tumours. In addition, the work has shown that radiosensitivity is independent of many clinical parameters and that the mean value is similar to that reported for cervix carcinomas.

Highlights

  • Colony morphology As there have been studies that have reported the growth of fibroblasts in soft-agar clonogenic assays (Lawton et al, 1994; Stausbol-Gron et al, 1995), care was taken to ensure that only

  • The malignant epithelial origin of these colonies was confirmed by staining with a low molecular weight cytokeratin marker (CAM 5.2)

  • Radical radiotherapy of malignant head and neck tumours has a possible advantage over surgery of less cosmetic and functional loss

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Summary

Objectives

The ultimate aim of this study is to correlate the radiosensitivity data with clinical outcome for a tumour type in which radiosensitivity could have a clear role to play in determining the optimum primary treatment

Results
Discussion
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