Source: SAGE Journals Online
Objective. To analyze outcomes in patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCCA) of the tonsil from the years 1998 to 2006. To assess factors that may affect disease-specific survival, such as patient characteristics and/or treatment modality.
Study Design and Setting. National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program.
Subjects and Methods. The SEER database was used to perform a population-based cohort analysis for patients diagnosed with SCCA of the tonsil from 1998 to 2006. Disease-specific survival was correlated with sex, age, ethnicity, year of diagnosis, and treatment modality in a univariate Cox proportional hazards analysis and a multiple Cox-regression model with and without interaction effect.
Results. Applied inclusion criteria resulted in 8378 patients. Of this patient cohort, 80% were male and 85% were white. The mean patient age at diagnosis was 58.1 years. On univariate and multivariate analyses, ethnicities other than white carried a significantly higher rate of disease-specific death (hazard ratio = 1.71, P < .001). Each additional year of age at the time of diagnosis carried approximately a 4% increase in likelihood of disease-specific death. With each passing year of time at diagnosis, patients carried a decreased risk of disease-specific death (P < .001); this value was significant in all 3 statistical models. Patients who underwent external-beam radiation had a higher likelihood of disease-specific survival with each passing year at time of diagnosis.
Conclusion. Population analysis based on the SEER database reveals increased disease-specific survival from tonsillar SCCA in more recent years. This may be because of earlier diagnosis, an increase in less aggressive subtypes of SCCA, and more effective treatment modalities.
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