Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3155624 | Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2006 | 6 Pages |
PurposeTo evaluate local and regional recurrence and the outcomes for salvage surgery in patients for oral cancer.Patients and MethodsThis study analyzed 354 consecutive patients with oral cancer treated primarily by surgery or surgery combined with adjuvant therapy by 1 surgeon (R.A.O.) between February 1991 and September 2001.ResultsOverall recurrence rate was 15.5%; with 5.4% local, 8.5% regional, and 1.4% locoregional. Overall salvage for local recurrence was 52.6% 3-year survival, and statistically significant favorable prognostic factors were salvaged by surgery alone and initial cancer staging of I/II. Overall salvage for regional recurrence was 50%, with recurrence in a previously untreated neck and salvage with radical neck dissection plus radiotherapy giving the best prognosis. No patients with locoregional recurrence were salvaged.ConclusionsPatients who were stage I/II and were treated initially by surgery alone were the best candidates for salvage if they recurred. Salvage was best achieved with surgery or surgery + adjuvant therapy, and patients recurring within 6 months had a worse survival. Patients with locoregional recurrence or treated with RT ± chemotherapy alone have negligible survival.