AI Article Synopsis

  • Temporal bone squamous cell carcinoma (TBSCC) has a poor prognosis and the study aimed to evaluate 5-year survival rates for advanced cases across various treatment methods.
  • A total of 1229 studies were reviewed, resulting in 31 that provided relevant survival data, analyzing 1289 patients, which showed a 5-year overall survival (OS) rate of 59.6%.
  • The findings indicated no significant differences in survival rates between different treatments for early and advanced-stage cancers, suggesting similar outcomes regardless of the treatment approach used.

Article Abstract

Objective: Temporal bone squamous cell carcinoma (TBSCC) is a rare malignancy with poor prognosis, and optimal treatment for advanced cases is uncertain. Our systematic literature review aimed to assess 5-year survival outcomes for advanced TBSCC across different treatment modalities.

Data Sources: EMBASE, Medline, PubMed, and Web of Science.

Review Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines for articles published between January 1989 and June 2023.

Results: The review yielded 1229 citations of which 31 provided 5-year survival data for TBSCC. The final analysis included 1289 patients. T classification data was available for 1269 patients and overall stage for 1033 patients. Data for 5-year overall survival (OS) was 59.6%. Five-year OS was 81.9% for T1/2 and 47.5% for T3/4 (P < .0001). OS for T1/T2 cancers did not significantly differ between surgery and radiation (100% vs 81.3%, P  = .103). For advanced-stage disease (T3/T4), there was no statistical difference in OS when comparing surgery with postoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) (OS 50.0%) versus surgery with postoperative radiotherapy (XRT) (OS 53.3%) versus definitive CRT (OS 58.1%, P  = .767-1.000). There was not enough data to assess the role of neoadjuvant CRT.

Conclusion: Most patients will present with advanced-stage disease, and nodal metastasis is seen in nearly 22% of patients. This study confirms the prognostic correlation of the current T classification system. Our results suggest that OS did not differ significantly between surgery and XRT for early stage disease, and combined treatment modalities yield similar 5-year OS for advanced cancers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ohn.678DOI Listing

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