Abstract
In current guidelines, early tongue cancer status post partial glossectomy without adverse risk features do not require adjuvant treatment. However, many of these patients developed recurrence with neck metastases soon. The objectives of this study were to investigate the potential risk factors in early tongue cancer that prophylactic management of neck may be considered. From January 2010 to September 2015, this retrospective study enrolled 102 patients with T1-2N0 primary oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma according to AJCC 8th edition Cancer Staging System. All patients underwent partial glossectomy with or without selective neck dissection, and did not receive any adjuvant treatment. Patients with any adverse risk features were excluded. We have studied the 4-year cancer-specific survival and neck recurrence rate, and analyzed the relevance between pathologic tumor classification, tumor depth, tumor histologic grade, and measured surgical margin of primary tumor. The median follow up duration was 47 months (range 6-93 months) with the median recurrence interval was 13 months. Histologic grade ≥2 of primary tumor was significantly associated with increased risk of neck recurrence and disease-specific mortality in both univariate and multivariate analysis. Histologic grade ≥2 was an adverse prognostic factor of neck recurrence and was significantly associated with poor cancer-specific survival in T1-2N0 early oral tongue cancer patients. Therefore, prophylactic neck dissection or prophylactic adjuvant radiation therapy to neck may be considered in T1-2N0 early oral tongue cancer with histologic grade ≥2 of primary tumor.
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