Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York, USA.
CA Cancer J Clin. 2023 Mar;73(2):164-197. doi: 10.3322/caac.21758. Epub 2022 Oct 28.
The most common cancer caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in the United States is oropharyngeal cancer (OPC), and its incidence has been rising since the turn of the century. Because of substantial long-term morbidities with chemoradiation and the favorable prognosis of HPV-positive OPC, identifying the optimal deintensification strategy for this group has been a keystone of academic head-and-neck surgery, radiation oncology, and medical oncology for over the past decade. However, the first generation of randomized chemotherapy deintensification trials failed to change the standard of care, triggering concern over the feasibility of de-escalation. National database studies estimate that up to one third of patients receive nonstandard de-escalated treatments, which have subspecialty-specific nuances. A synthesis of the multidisciplinary deintensification data and current treatment standards is important for the oncology community to reinforce best practices and ensure optimal patient outcomes. In this review, the authors present a summary and comparison of prospective HPV-positive OPC de-escalation trials. Chemotherapy attenuation compromises outcomes without reducing toxicity. Limited data comparing transoral robotic surgery (TORS) with radiation raise concern over toxicity and outcomes with TORS. There are promising data to support de-escalating adjuvant therapy after TORS, but consensus on treatment indications is needed. Encouraging radiation deintensification strategies have been reported (upfront dose reduction and induction chemotherapy-based patient selection), but level I evidence is years away. Ultimately, stage and HPV status may be insufficient to guide de-escalation. The future of deintensification may lie in incorporating intratreatment response assessments to harness the powers of personalized medicine and integrate real-time surveillance.
在美国,由人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)感染引起的最常见癌症是口咽癌(OPC),其发病率自本世纪初以来一直在上升。由于放化疗的长期严重并发症以及 HPV 阳性 OPC 的良好预后,确定该人群的最佳减量化策略一直是过去十年中头颈部外科、放射肿瘤学和肿瘤内科的重点。然而,第一代化疗减量化随机试验未能改变标准治疗,引发了对降级可行性的担忧。国家数据库研究估计,多达三分之一的患者接受了非标准的降级治疗,这些治疗具有亚专科特有的细微差别。综合多学科减量化数据和当前治疗标准对于肿瘤学界非常重要,可以强化最佳实践并确保患者获得最佳结果。在这篇综述中,作者总结和比较了前瞻性 HPV 阳性 OPC 减量化试验。化疗衰减会影响结局,而不会降低毒性。比较经口机器人手术(TORS)与放疗的有限数据引发了对 TORS 毒性和结局的担忧。有令人鼓舞的数据支持 TORS 后辅助治疗的降级,但需要就治疗适应症达成共识。已经有令人鼓舞的放疗减量化策略的报道(起始剂量降低和基于诱导化疗的患者选择),但 I 级证据还需要几年的时间。最终,分期和 HPV 状态可能不足以指导降级。减量化的未来可能在于纳入治疗中的反应评估,以利用个性化医学的力量,并实时监测。