Several studies have shown that the thickness of tongue carcinoma is related to prognosis and to the likelihood of cervical node metastases. We investigated whether preoperative estimates of tumor thickness and volume, as determined from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), correlated with histologic thickness and might therefore predict the presence of neck metastases. We assessed relationships between histologic tumor thickness and MRI tumor thickness and volume in a retrospective series of 33 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue. Thicknesses were determined by direct measurement and by considering corrections for ulceration or tumor vegetation (reconstructed thickness). Relationships between MRI thickness and the presence or absence of homolateral and contralateral nodal metastases were also investigated. We found that MRI thicknesses correlated strongly and directly with histologic tumor thicknesses, although mean MRI thicknesses were significantly greater than histologic thicknesses. MRI thicknesses were significantly greater in patients with contralateral neck involvement than in those with no neck involvement. We conclude that MRI provides an accurate and reproducible means of estimating the thickness of tongue carcinomas, paving the way for further studies on more extensive series of patients to determine whether preoperatively determined MRI thickness can reliably predict homolateral and bilateral neck involvement.
Background
Surgery of tongue tumors includes different procedures ranging from mucosal resection to complex combined resection. Numerous terms have been used to describe such procedures, but there is no consensus between the terminology and the extent of resection.
Methods and Results
We searched the medical literature and found a lack of published information. We undertook to describe a new classification of surgical procedures for tongue tumor resection. We based it upon the surgical anatomy of the tongue and the spread of the cancer. We posited that there were five major types of glossectomy embracing all the methods of tongue cancer resection. This classification was reviewed and endorsed by an international team of experts.
Conclusion
We propose a more precise classification than that currently in practice, thereby bringing clarity and consistency to the terminology, facilitating shared communication between surgeons, comparison between published research, and ultimately improving surgical practice and patient care.
Background
We investigated the role of the soft tissue tract between the primary tumor and the neck lymph nodes, the “T‐N tract,” in patients with tongue squamous cell carcinoma at an advanced stage.
Methods
We performed a compartmental tongue surgery in 233 patients. Cumulative incidence of relapses and overall survival curves were compared by T‐N tract involvement. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess the independent role of T‐N tract.
Results
At 4 years of follow‐up, patients with disease in the T‐N tract experienced a significantly more distant recurrence (40%) than did patients without T‐N tract involvement (22%; P = .02). Multivariate Cox models indicate a significant almost triple risk of distant metastases (hazard ratio [HR], 2.70; 95% CI, 1.01‐7.19; P = .05) and double risk of death (HR, 2.09; 95%CI, 1.13‐3.85; P = .02) in patients with “T‐N tract involvement.”
Conclusions
Our data show that the T‐N tract plays an important role in prognosis and survival in patients with tongue cancer.
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