Background: The purpose of this study was to describe the pathology of the different compartments in endoscopic resection of nasal intestinal-type adenocarcinomas (ITACs) and its relationships with oncologic outcomes.

Methods: This retrospective study included all patients endoscopically operated for nasal ITACs, followed by radiotherapy in the majority of cases, between 2004 and 2014. The surgery systematically separated 3 compartments: ethmoid lateral mass, olfactory cleft, and anterior cranial fossa (in cases with skull-base invasion) to analyze their pathological "focal" or "massive" invasion by the tumor.

Results: Sixty-seven patients (aged 69.2 ± 9.8 years) were included. Twenty-nine patients (43.3%) had only pathological focal invasion. At 61.0 ± 41.7 months of mean follow-up, the recurrence rates were 34.2% in the group with massive invasion and 10.3% in the group with focal invasion (P = .023). The disease-specific death rate had a tendency to be higher in the group with massive invasion (23.7% vs 6.9% for the group with focal invasion; P = .097). By Kaplan-Meier analysis, the 5-year disease-specific survival rate was better in the group with focal invasion than the group with massive invasion (P = .01). The 5-year overall survival was not different between the 2 groups (47.4% and 65.5% for focal invasion and massive invasion respectively; P = .14).

Conclusion: Compartmentalized endoscopic resection, combined with postoperative radiotherapy, is one way to operate on nasal ITACs with good oncologic outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hed.25349DOI Listing

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