Abstract

To the Editor: In the report by Posner et al. (Oct. 25 issue)1 on the treatment of head and neck cancer, we question the authors’ implication that the 91-11 trial of the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group and Head and Neck Intergroup showed that cisplatin–fluorouracil (PF) induction followed by radiotherapy for laryngeal preservation is equivalent to or better than concomitant cisplatin and radiotherapy. The 91-11 trial was not designed to show equivalence.2 Both combinations resulted in better laryngectomy-free survival than did radiotherapy alone, but the composite end point does not account for a preserved larynx in patients whose death was not due to laryngeal cancer (over half the deaths). Rates of laryngeal preservation and locoregional control provide a much better assessment, and for both end points, the rates were significantly better with concomitant cisplatin and radiotherapy than with radiotherapy alone or PF induction followed by radiotherapy, whereas overall survival did not differ significantly.2,3 The results of the 91-11 trial do not justify the use of docetaxel–cisplatin–fluorouracil (TPF) sequential therapy for T3 and low-volume T4 laryngeal cancer. Arlene Forastiere, M.D.

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