Howard James, Dwivedi Raghav C, Masterson Liam, Kothari Prasad, Quon Harry, Holsinger F Christopher
ENT Department, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Hills Road, Cambridge, UK, CB2 0QQ.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Dec 14;12(12):CD012939. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012939.pub2.
More than 400,000 cases of oropharyngeal squamous cell cancer (OPSCC) are diagnosed every year worldwide and this is rising. Much of the increase has been attributed to human papillomavirus (HPV). HPV-positive OPSCC patients are often younger and have significantly improved survival relative to HPV-negative patients. Traditional management of OPSCC has been with radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy, as this was shown to have similar survival to open surgery but with significantly lower morbidity. Techniques have evolved, however, with the development of computerised planning and intensity-modulated radiotherapy, and of minimally invasive surgical techniques. Acute and late toxicities associated with chemoradiotherapy are a significant burden for OPSCC patients and with an ever-younger cohort, any strategies that could decrease treatment-associated morbidity should be investigated.
To assess the effects of de-intensified adjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy in comparison to standard adjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy in patients treated with minimally invasive transoral surgery (transoral robotic surgery or transoral laser microsurgery) for resectable HPV-positive oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma.
The Cochrane ENT Information Specialist searched the Cochrane ENT Trials Register; Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL); Ovid MEDLINE; Ovid Embase; CINAHL; Web of Science; ClinicalTrials.gov; ICTRP and additional sources for published and unpublished trials. The date of the search was 26 April 2018.
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in patients with carcinoma of the oropharynx (as defined by the World Health Organization classification C09, C10). Cancers included were primary HPV-positive squamous cell tumours originating from the oropharyngeal mucosa. Tumours were classified as T1-4a with or without nodal spread and with no evidence of distant metastatic spread. The intervention was minimally invasive transoral surgery followed by de-intensified adjuvant therapy (either omission of chemotherapy or reduced-dose radiotherapy). The comparator was minimally invasive transoral surgery followed by standard concurrent chemoradiotherapy or standard-dose radiotherapy. The treatments received were of curative intent and patients had not undergone any prior intervention, other than diagnostic biopsy.
We used the standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. Our primary outcomes were overall survival (disease-related survival was to be studied where possible) and disease-free survival, measured at one, two, three and five years. Our secondary outcomes included assessment of swallowing ability and voice, measured at one, six, 12 and 24 months. We planned to use GRADE to assess the quality of evidence for each outcome.
We did not identify any completed RCTs that met our inclusion criteria. However, three eligible studies are in progress:ADEPT is a phase III trial comparing postoperative radiotherapy with or without cisplatin in HPV-positive T1-4a OPSCC patients. Included patients must have received minimally invasive surgery and demonstrated extra-capsular spread from disease in the neck.ECOG-E3311 is a phase II trial of treatment for HPV-positive locally advanced OPSCC (stages III-IVa + IVb without distant metastasis). Patients are stratified after minimally invasive surgery. Medium-risk patients are randomised to either standard or reduced-dose radiotherapy.PATHOS is a phase III trial of treatment for HPV-positive OPSCC (T1-3, N0-2b). Patients are stratified after minimally invasive surgery. Medium-risk patients are randomised to either standard or reduced-dose radiotherapy. High-risk patients are randomised to radiotherapy with or without concurrent cisplatin.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This review highlights the current lack of high-quality randomised controlled trials studying treatment de-escalation after minimally invasive surgery in patients with HPV-positive OPSCC. However, trials that will meet the inclusion criteria for this review are in progress with results expected between 2021 and 2023.
全球每年诊断出超过40万例口咽鳞状细胞癌(OPSCC),且这一数字呈上升趋势。其中大部分增长归因于人类乳头瘤病毒(HPV)。HPV阳性的OPSCC患者往往更年轻,相对于HPV阴性患者,其生存率有显著提高。OPSCC的传统治疗方法是放疗,可联合或不联合化疗,因为研究表明这种治疗方法与开放手术的生存率相似,但发病率显著更低。然而,随着计算机化规划和调强放疗以及微创外科技术的发展,治疗技术也在不断进步。放化疗相关的急性和晚期毒性对OPSCC患者来说是一个重大负担,而且患者群体日益年轻化,因此应研究任何能够降低治疗相关发病率的策略。
评估与标准辅助(放)化疗相比,减量化辅助(放)化疗对接受微创经口手术(经口机器人手术或经口激光显微手术)治疗的可切除HPV阳性口咽鳞状细胞癌患者的效果。
Cochrane耳鼻喉科信息专家检索了Cochrane耳鼻喉科试验注册库;对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL);Ovid MEDLINE;Ovid Embase;CINAHL;科学引文索引;ClinicalTrials.gov;国际临床试验注册平台(ICTRP)以及其他已发表和未发表试验的来源。检索日期为2018年4月26日。
针对口咽癌患者(根据世界卫生组织分类C09、C10定义)的随机对照试验(RCT)。纳入的癌症为起源于口咽黏膜的原发性HPV阳性鳞状细胞瘤。肿瘤分类为T1 - 4a,有或无淋巴结转移,且无远处转移扩散的证据。干预措施为微创经口手术,随后进行减量化辅助治疗(即省略化疗或降低放疗剂量)。对照为微创经口手术,随后进行标准同步放化疗或标准剂量放疗。所接受的治疗为根治性治疗,患者除诊断性活检外未接受过任何先前干预。
我们采用了Cochrane预期的标准方法程序。我们的主要结局是总生存期(尽可能研究疾病相关生存期)和无病生存期,在1年、2年、3年和5年时进行测量。我们的次要结局包括在1个月、6个月、12个月和24个月时对吞咽能力和嗓音的评估。我们计划使用GRADE来评估每个结局的证据质量。
我们未找到任何符合我们纳入标准的已完成RCT。然而,有三项符合条件的研究正在进行中:ADEPT是一项III期试验,比较HPV阳性T1 - 4a OPSCC患者术后放疗联合或不联合顺铂的效果。纳入的患者必须接受过微创手术,且颈部疾病有包膜外扩散。ECOG - E3311是一项针对HPV阳性局部晚期OPSCC(III - IVa + IVb期且无远处转移)的II期治疗试验。患者在接受微创手术后进行分层。中危患者随机分为标准放疗或降低剂量放疗。PATHOS是一项针对HPV阳性OPSCC(T1 - 3,N0 - 2b)的III期治疗试验。患者在接受微创手术后进行分层。中危患者随机分为标准放疗或降低剂量放疗。高危患者随机分为放疗联合或不联合同步顺铂。
本综述强调了目前缺乏高质量随机对照试验来研究HPV阳性OPSCC患者微创手术后治疗降阶梯的情况。然而,符合本综述纳入标准的试验正在进行中,预计2021年至2023年之间会有结果。