Department of Dermatology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA.
JAMA Dermatol. 2013 Jan;149(1):35-41. doi: 10.1001/jamadermatol.2013.746.
To identify factors associated with poor outcomes in perineurally invasive squamous cell carcinoma.
Retrospective cohort study.
Two academic hospitals in Boston, Massachusetts.
Adults with perineural SCC diagnosed from 1998 to 2008.
Hazard ratios (HRs) for local recurrence, nodal metastasis, death from disease, and overall death, adjusted for known prognostic factors.
A total of 114 cases were included, all but 2 involving unnamed nerves. Only a single local recurrence occurred in cases with no risk factors other than nerve invasion. Tumors with large nerve (≥ 0.1 mm in caliber) invasion were significantly more likely to have other risk factors, including diameters of 2 cm or greater (P<.001), invasion beyond the subcutaneous fat (P<.003), multiple nerve involvement (P<.001), infiltrative growth (P=.01), or lymphovascular invasion (P=.01). On univariate analysis, large nerve invasion was associated with increased risk of nodal metastasis (HR, 5.6 [95% CI, 1.1-27.9]) and death from disease (HR, 4.5 [95% CI, 1.2-17.0]). On multivariate analysis, tumor diameter of 2 cm or greater predicted local recurrence (HR, 4.8 [95% CI, 1.8-12.7]), >1 risk factor predicted nodal metastasis (2 factors: HR, 4.1 [95% CI, 1.0-16.6]), lymphovascular invasion predicted death from disease (HR, 15.3 [95% CI, 3.7-62.8]), and overall death (HR, 1.1 [95% CI, 1.0-1.1]). Invasion beyond subcutaneous fat also predicted overall death (HR, 2.1 [95% CI, 1.0-4.3]).
Squamous cell carcinoma involving unnamed small nerves (<0.1 mm in caliber) may have a low risk of poor outcomes in the absence of other risk factors. Large-caliber nerve invasion is associated with an elevated risk of nodal metastasis and death, but this is due in part to multiple other risk factors associated with large-caliber nerve invasion. A larger study is needed to estimate the specific prognostic impact of nerve caliber.
确定与神经周围侵袭性鳞状细胞癌不良预后相关的因素。
回顾性队列研究。
马萨诸塞州波士顿的两家学术医院。
1998 年至 2008 年间诊断为神经周围 SCC 的成年人。
局部复发、淋巴结转移、疾病相关死亡和总死亡率的危险比(HRs),并针对已知的预后因素进行调整。
共纳入 114 例患者,除 2 例外均累及无名神经。仅在无神经侵犯以外的危险因素的情况下,单一局部复发。大神经(≥0.1 毫米口径)侵犯的肿瘤更有可能存在其他危险因素,包括直径为 2 厘米或更大(P<.001)、侵犯皮下脂肪以外(P<.003)、多神经受累(P<.001)、浸润性生长(P=.01)或淋巴血管侵犯(P=.01)。单因素分析显示,大神经侵犯与淋巴结转移(HR,5.6 [95%CI,1.1-27.9])和疾病相关死亡(HR,4.5 [95%CI,1.2-17.0])风险增加相关。多因素分析显示,肿瘤直径为 2 厘米或更大预测局部复发(HR,4.8 [95%CI,1.8-12.7]),>1 个危险因素预测淋巴结转移(2 个因素:HR,4.1 [95%CI,1.0-16.6]),淋巴血管侵犯预测疾病相关死亡(HR,15.3 [95%CI,3.7-62.8])和总死亡(HR,1.1 [95%CI,1.0-1.1])。皮下脂肪侵犯以外也预测总死亡率(HR,2.1 [95%CI,1.0-4.3])。
在无其他危险因素的情况下,累及小神经(<0.1 毫米口径)的鳞状细胞癌可能预后不良的风险较低。大口径神经侵犯与淋巴结转移和死亡风险增加相关,但这部分归因于与大口径神经侵犯相关的多个其他危险因素。需要更大的研究来估计神经口径的具体预后影响。