Objectives/Hypothesis
Head and neck cancer pain is a prevalent problem, and the current opioid crisis has highlighted concerns raised in chronic pain management. This study assessed the characteristics of opioid use in patients undergoing treatment for oropharynx cancer and identified risk factors associated with chronic opioid use.
Study Design
Retrospective cohort study.
Methods
A study was conducted of 198 eligible patients who underwent radiotherapy as part of their treatment for oropharynx cancer at a single institution from 2012 to 2017. p16/human papillomavirus (HPV) status was determined by pathology report review. Opioid use was recorded. Statistical analysis was performed to assess risk factors for chronic opioid use and effect on overall survival.
Results
The average age was 62 years, and the mean follow‐up was 38 months. Eighty‐three percent of patients had stage III/IV disease, and 73% received chemoradiotherapy. Sixty‐nine percent were HPV/p16 positive. Fifty‐seven (29%) patients had preexisting chronic pain conditions. Chronic opioid use was observed in 53% of the patients. Age ≤ 62 years (P < .0001), history of depression (P = .0356), p16 negative status (P = .0097), opioid use at pretreatment visit (P = .0021), and presence of a preexisting chronic pain condition at time of diagnosis (P = .0181) were associated with chronic opioid use using univariate analysis. On multivariate analysis, T stage and anxiety/depression were associated with chronic opioid use. Overall survival was worse for patients who had chronic opioid use, but was not significant when recurrence was taken into consideration.
Conclusions
More than 50% of the patients treated for oropharynx squamous cell carcinoma in this cohort were chronic opioid users after treatment. Identifying patients at greatest risk for chronic opioid use prior to treatment may help with long‐term pain management in this patient population.
Level of Evidence
4
Laryngoscope, 129:2087–2093, 2019
Background
Resection of colorectal liver metastasis (CLM) is beneficial when feasible. However, the benefit of second hepatectomy for hepatic recurrence in CLM remains unclear.
Methods
The Colorectal Liver Operative Metastasis International Collaborative retrospectively examined 1004 CLM cases from 2000 to 2018 from a total of 953 patients. Hepatic recurrence after initial hepatectomy was identified in 218 patients. Kaplan–Meier analysis was performed for overall survival (OS) and recurrence‐free survival (RFS). Propensity score matching (PSM) was performed to offset selection bias. Cox proportional‐hazards regression was performed to identify risk factors associated with OS.
Results
A total of 51 patients underwent second hepatectomy. Unadjusted median OS was 60.1 months in repeat‐hepatectomy versus 38.3 months in the single‐hepatectomy group (p = 0.015). In the PSM population, median OS remained significantly better in the repeat‐hepatectomy group (60.1 vs. 33.1 months; p = 0.0023); median RFS was 12.4 months for the repeat‐hepatectomy group, versus 9.8 months in the single‐hepatectomy group (p = 0.0050). Repeat hepatectomy was associated with lower risk of death (hazard ratio: 0.283; p = 0.000012). Obesity, tobacco use, and high intraoperative blood loss were associated with significant risk of death (p < 0.05).
Conclusion
In CLM with hepatic recurrence, second hepatectomy was beneficial for OS. With PSM, the OS benefit of performing a second hepatectomy remained significant.
Background: Chemotherapy has been increasingly combined with surgery as multimodality treatment for resectable colorectal-liver metastases (CLM). There is paucity of clinical data addressing optimal timing of chemotherapy relative to surgery. We examined outcomes of patients undergoing hepatectomy for resectable CLM.Methods: Seven hundred and eighteen patients treated with hepatectomy for CLM were analyzed from five hepatobiliary institutions between 2000 and 2018. Overall survival (OS) was measured from time of hepatectomy for patients receiving: surgery alone, neoadjuvant, adjuvant, and neoadjuvant-plus-adjuvant (perioperative) chemotherapy. Kaplan-Meier analysis was performed to detect differences in OS between treatment groups. Single-and multi-variable analysis with Cox proportional hazards were run for OS between groups.Results: One hundred and thirty-seven patients (19.08%) received surgery, 104 (14.48%) received neoadjuvant-only, 214 (29.81%) received adjuvant-only, and 263 (36.63%) received perioperative chemotherapy; with median OS of 48.20, 46.83, 56.27, and 49.93 months, respectively. No differences in median OS were seen between groups on Kaplan-Meier analysis. No significant difference in Charlson-Deyo comorbidity status was seen between groups (p = 0.853), while significant difference was seen in maximum tumor size (p = 0.0023). On multivariate analysis, adjuvant (p = 0.010) and perioperative (p = 0.020) chemotherapy were independently associated with OS compared to surgery alone.Discussion: Despite group differences, chemotherapy after surgery was independently associated with improved OS in CLM.
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