AI Article Synopsis

  • The TNM system is the primary method for assessing the clinical outcome of Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC) patients and guides treatment decisions.
  • A retrospective study of 430 patients in Sri Lanka revealed that incomplete tumor excision significantly decreased survival, while postoperative radiotherapy improved outcomes, particularly for certain stages.
  • Key factors influencing survival included TNM stage, presence of nodal metastasis, and the status of excision margins, with specific surgical options leading to varied survival rates among patients.

Article Abstract

The clinical outcome of patients with OSCC is assessed based on TNM system and currently it is the most reliable indicator on which therapeutic decisions are made. The patients with advanced disease are managed with combined treatment modalities. The aim of this retrospective study was to identify the factors which influence survival of patients with OSCC in Sri Lanka. Four hundred and thirty patients who have been managed surgically using either (1) local excision, (2) local excision+supraomohyoid neck dissection, (3) local excision+modified radical neck dissection, (4) local excision+radical neck dissection, (5) local excision+contra-lateral neck dissection depending on TNM stage, with or without post-operative radiotherapy. Patients with incompletely excised tumours showed statistically significant poor survival which improved with radiotherapy (stage II P=0.002, stage III P=0.017). With reference to TNM stage IV tumours, the patients who had received surgical option 4, showed poor survival compared to surgical options 2, 3, and 5 (P=0.001). However, within the group of patients who had received surgical option 4, those who had nodal metastasis showed poorer survival compared to patients without nodal metastasis. In addition, survival improved in patients who had been treated with surgical option 4, with radiotherapy. Furthermore, margin status was also found to significantly influence the survival of patients with TNM stage IV tumours (P=0.003). The main factors that had significant impact on the survival were TNM stage, nodal metastasis and the state of excision margins.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2015.02.011DOI Listing

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