Background.Literature shows no data about a complete cohort of head and neck cancer patients who developed pulmonary metastases. In this study, we investigate factors related to survival, with emphasis on the role of a pulmonary metastasectomy.Methods. A retrospective review of 138 patients who developed pulmonary metastases (5.5% of all head and neck cancer patients) in the period 1978 to 1994 is presented. In a stepwise regression analysis (Cox), factors were identified related to survival. Also investigated was whether the prognostic value of potential prognosticators differed between the group that underwent metastasectomy and the group that did not.Results. One hundred thirty-eight patients had metastases originating from head and neck cancer. The 5-year survival rate for all these patients was 13%. Younger patients (P = .011), patients with a longer disease-free interval (DFI) (P = .016), and patients with a nonsquamous cell carcinoma (P = ,038) did better.No evidence of a relationship between survival and sex or survival and number of metastases was found. Twenty-one patients underwent surgical resection of their pulmonary metastases. In 18 patients the resection was complete. The 5-year survival rate for patients who underwent a metastasectomy was 59%, compared with 4% in the nonmetastasectomy group (P = ,0033).
Analysis of frailty could identify elderly patients who might suffer more than expected during the postoperative period after head and neck cancer surgery. In this study, frailty was not identified as a new predictor of complications after head and neck cancer surgery.
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