This retrospective study was, to our knowledge, the largest ever reported in the literature. This series confirmed the risk factor of this lesion as well as the lesion's influence on the survival rate. Surgery is the most important part of the treatment. Local recurrences were responsible for the poor prognosis of this lesion.
Small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the sinonasal tract is an uncommon neoplasm with aggressive clinical behaviour. Recurrence is frequent and the prognosis is poor. However, the current treatment of these neuroendocrine neoplasms varies widely.
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Local relapses of head and neck tumors are not often eligible for surgical and/or radiotherapy retreatment, and the efficacy of systemic chemotherapy is poor. A greater accumulation and efficacy of anticancer drugs with lower systemic toxicity is theoretically obtained with intratumoral chemotherapy. In experimental studies, epinephrine has been shown to increase the concentration and antitumor effect of intratumoral cisplatin. Fourteen patients with locally recurrent head and neck tumors (median age, 58.7 years) were included in this phase 2 trial. Recurrent tumors (squamous cell carcinomas) were located on the tongue, oral pharynx, or cervical nodes. Prior therapy was surgery and/or radiotherapy with or without intravenous chemotherapy. Inclusion criteria included an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group/World Health Organization performance status of 0, 1, or 2, an anticipated survival of >3 months, adequate cardiac, kidney, liver, and bone marrow function, and no coagulopathy or carotid invasion. Fifty intratumoral injections of cisplatin-epinephrine (average, 3.6 injections per patient; range, 1 to 5 injections) were given to the 14 patients from November 1998 to July 2000. Patients were treated with cisplatin (1 mg/mL; maximum dose, 50 mg) at an injection volume corresponding to the tumor volume (1 mL/cm3 of tumor; maximum volume, 50 mL). Epinephrine was added at a concentration of 0.02 mg/mL. Intratumoral injections were repeated every 2 to 3 weeks at different locations in the tumors to obtain a homogeneous distribution. Tumor response was evaluated by clinical examination and computed tomography. Eight objective responses were registered among the 14 patients. Four were complete responses, and 4 were partial responses. The average time to disease progression was 11.5 +/- 8.9 weeks. Local adverse effects were transient pain, swelling, and erythema at the site of the injection. No nephrotoxicity, neurotoxicity, or ototoxicity was observed. Intratumoral injection of cisplatin and epinephrine in an aqueous solution has a definite antitumor activity in recurrent head and neck cancer with acceptable local tolerance and no major systemic toxic effects except for transient tachycardia and high blood pressure at the time of injection.
The WHO performance status was excellent for all patients. Thirty-seven were classified as T1-T2 and 38 were N0. All of them except one were treated with curative intent. Treatment failures were observed in 25 patients (48%). Four patients could be successfully salvaged after SCCOT recurrence or progression. The disease-free survival (DFS) was 52% at 5 years. The 5-year overall survival (OS) rate was 64%. Factors that affected the OS were invasion of the floor (p=0.009), cross over of the midline (p=0.02), positive lymph nodes (p=0.02), and the lack of disease control (p=0.0001).
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