Purpose: To investigate the clinical manifestations and treatment outcomes in patients with stage T4M0 nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
Materials and methods: Findings in 179 patients (age range, 13-78 years) with American Joint Committee on Cancer stage T4M0 nasopharyngeal carcinoma treated from January 1983 to February 1992 with a minimum follow-up of at least 5 years were reviewed. Of the 179 patients, 166 (92.7%) had World Health Organization type II or III disease. Forty-one patients (22.9%) had no lymph nodal involvement; 138 patients (77.1%) had metastatic nodal involvement in the neck. All patients underwent radiation therapy; 39 patients also received different forms of chemotherapy. The radiation therapy doses were usually 70-74 Gy administered to the primary tumor over 7 or 8 weeks, 70-74 Gy to the neck region in patients with nodal involvement, or 50-60 Gy administered to the neck region over 5 or 6 weeks in patients without neck nodal involvement.
Results: In 100 patients, radiation therapy failed in the primary tumor alone (n = 28), neck nodes alone (n = 5), and distant metastases alone (n = 43) or at a combination of sites (n = 24). The cumulative failure rates for the primary tumor, neck metastases, and distant metastases were 25.1% (n = 45), 14.0% (n = 25), and 33.0% (n = 59), respectively. The 5-year primary disease-free, distant disease-free, and overall survival rates were 68.7%, 56.5%, and 28.6%, respectively. Results of salvage treatment for relapse were unsatisfactory.
Conclusion: In about three-tenths of patients, T4M0 nasopharyngeal carcinoma can be cured with conventional high-dose radiation therapy.