Cancers (Feb 2024)

Extra-Capsular Spread of Lymph Node Metastasis in Oral, Oropharyngeal and Hypopharyngeal Cancer: A Comparative Subsite Analysis

  • Yung Jee Kang,
  • Goeun Park,
  • Sung Yool Park,
  • Taehwan Kim,
  • Eunhye Kim,
  • Yujin Heo,
  • Changhee Lee,
  • Han-Sin Jeong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16030659
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
p. 659

Abstract

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Background: The extra-capsular spread (ECS) of lymph node metastasis (LNM) is a hallmark of aggressive primary tumor phenotype in head and neck cancer (HNC); however, the factors influencing ECS are poorly understood. Patients and Methods: This was a retrospective study, including 190 cases of oral tongue cancer (OTC), 148 cases of oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) (118 HPV-positive and 30 HPV-negative), and 100 cases of hypopharyngeal cancer (HPC). Tumor dimension, tumor biological variables (lymphovascular/perineural invasion and histologic grade), and LNM variables (LNM number and size) were analyzed according to the presence of ECS using multivariable logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses. Results: LNM variables were significant factors for ECS in all subsites of HNC (p p < 0.01). Meanwhile, in OPC and HPC, neither the primary tumor dimension nor the T status were significant factors for ECS occurrence. The predictability of ECS by ROC curve using multiple variables was 0.819 [95% confidence interval: 0.759–0.878] in OTC, 0.687 [0.559–0.815] in HPV-positive OPC, 0.823 [0.642–1.000] in HPV-negative OPC, and 0.907 [0.841–0.973] in HPC. Conclusion: LNM variables were correlated with ECS occurrence for most HNC subsites, and site-dependent primary tumor characteristics might contribute differentially to the ECS development of LNM in HNC.

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