Background: Despite resection followed by adjuvant radiotherapy, high-risk cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck region (SCCHN) often recur. Because adjuvant concurrent chemoradiation reduces recurrence among high-risk mucosal SCCHN, we sought to understand its efficacy among high-risk cutaneous SCCHN.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients with cutaneous SCCHN who underwent adjuvant radiation or concurrent chemoradiation. Patients must have had stage III/IV with high-risk features, including metastatic involvement of ≥2 lymph nodes, positive margins, or extracapsular invasion.
Results: There were 61 patients: 27 (44%) received adjuvant radiation and 34 (56%) received adjuvant chemoradiation. The median recurrence-free survivals were 15.4 and 40.3 months, respectively. Adjuvant chemoradiation significantly decreased the risk of recurrence or death in a multivariable analysis: hazard ratio (HR) 0.31 (p = .01). However, a difference in overall survival was not found.
Conclusion: For high-risk cutaneous SCCHN, adjuvant chemoradiation was associated with a better recurrence-free survival than adjuvant radiation alone.
Keywords: adjuvant therapy; chemoradiation; head and neck cancer; radiation; skin cancer.
© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.