AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers assessed the impact of low-dose chemotherapy combined with radiation therapy on patients with glottic carcinoma, focusing on different tumor classifications based on the UICC system.
  • A total of 51 patients received chemoradiation therapy (CRT) using low-dose CDDP and oral UFT, while a control group of 49 patients was treated with radiation therapy alone (RT).
  • Results showed that CRT led to significantly better laryngeal preservation and local control rates in T3 lesions compared to RT alone, but no benefits were found for T2 lesions, highlighting the need for differentiated treatment approaches based on tumor classification.

Article Abstract

We evaluated whether low-dose chemotherapy could improve effects of radiation therapy for glottic carcinoma with different prognostic factor based on the UICC 6th edition. Fifty-one patients with T2N0 glottic carcinoma classified by the UICC 5th edition underwent chemoradiation therapy with low-dose CDDP (4 mg/m(2)) and oral UFT (450 mg of tegafur) continuing for four weeks (CRT group). The historical control consisted of 49 patients treated with radiation therapy alone (RT group). Forty-six tumors with the adjacent sign, i.e. tumors located adjacent to the thyroid cartilage on radiological examinations, were classified as T3 according to the 6(th) edition. The 5-year local control and laryngeal preservation rates of the T2 (n=54) vs. T3 (n=46) lesions were 87% vs. 50% (p<0.0001) and 94% vs. 61% (p<0.0001), respectively. Among the T3 lesions, CRT (n=24) yielded significantly higher laryngeal preservation rates than did RT alone (n=22) (83% vs. 40%, p=0.0063), and the local control rates were higher in the CRT- than the RT group (62% vs. 36%, p=0.0882). While such benefits of CRT were not observed in patients with T2 lesions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02841860500490269DOI Listing

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