Management of 80 sinonasal undifferentiated carcinomas. Retrospective multicentre study of the French Network of Rare Head and Neck Cancers (REFCOR)

Pierre Pouvreau, Julien Coelho, Cécile Rumeau, Olivier Malard, Renaud Garrel, Justin Michel, Christian Righini, Sebastien Vergez, Robin Baudouin, Vianney Bastit, Jean Paul Marie, Aude Villepelet, Antoine Moya-Plana, Pierre Philouze, Nicolas Saroul, Laurence Digue, Amaury Daste, Sophie Renard, Sylvain Moriniere, Florent CarsuzaaBenjamin Verillaud, Gilles Poissonnet, Philippe Schultz, Esteban Brenet, François Mouawad, Juliette Thariat, Noémie Vulquin, Claire Castain, Ludovic de Gabory, Charles Dupin

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

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    Résumé

    Objectives: Sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) is a rare and aggressive disease requiring multimodal treatment, and multiple new entities once included in the spectrum of SNUC, such as SWI/SNF-deficient carcinomas, are emerging. We aimed to provide new data regarding the role of chemotherapy and surgery and the prognostic factors of disease-free survival. Methods: This study was based on data from the REFCOR database and included patients with SNUC treated with curative intent from 2007 to 2021 across 22 centres in France. Results: A total of 80 patients were included in the analysis. Among the entire cohort, the 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were 58% and 63%, respectively. Of 100% of the patients treated with irradiation, 29% underwent surgery, 56% neoadjuvant chemotherapy (82% had either a partial or a complete response) and 76% chemoradiotherapy. No treatment modality was associated with a better OS or DFS, including surgery (p = 0.34). There was a trend for a better DFS for the patients treated with chemotherapy (neoadjuvant or concomitant, p = 0.062). Overall survival at 3 years was 58% for SWI/SNF deficient group and 86% for non deficient group (p = 0.14). The locoregional relapse rate without distant metastases was 21% in the exclusive radiotherapy group and 26% in the surgery group. Grade 3 or higher toxicities concerned 9%, 32% and 29% of patients for surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy respectively. Conclusion: In the management of localised SNUC among all patients treated with irradiation, surgery yielded no benefit, whereas the addition of chemotherapy tended to improve disease-free survival.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Numéro d'article107108
    journalEuropean Journal of Surgical Oncology
    Volume49
    Numéro de publication12
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 déc. 2023

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