[On the relevance of histopathology results in oropharyngeal cancer with mandibular involvement and the necessary imaging].

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY
Hno Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-25 DOI:10.1007/s00106-024-01519-7
Stephan Herberhold, Susanne Greschus, Hanna Kußmann, Friedrich Bootz, Rudolf H Reich, Frederick Far
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Planning of surgical procedures in patients suffering from oropharyngeal cancer requires appropriate imaging, particularly in consideration of the spatial relationship to the mandible. Resection of portions of the mandible (box, marginal, or segmental resection) is often necessary, while simultaneously avoiding overtreatment. Typically, a computed tomography (CT) scan is initially performed. However, the question arises of whether CT alone is adequate for reliable assessment of mandibular involvement.

Materials and methods: A patient cohort of 25 individuals aged 44-79 years (mean 62 years) undergoing partial oropharyngeal resection with segmental mandibular resection was examined. The indication for segmental resection was based on the close relationship of the tumor to the mandible observed in imaging. Reconstruction was consistently carried out with a reconstruction plate and free or pedicled flaps. Preoperative radiological findings were compared with histopathology results after decalcification of the mandibular bone.

Results: Cortical tumor infiltration was observed in the mandible in 9 patients (36%). Preoperatively, clear bone infiltration had been identified in CT in only 2 of these 9 patients; in the remaining 7, only direct tumor contact with the mandible was evident. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed bone infiltration in 1 of these 7 patients.

Discussion: Adhering to safety margins requires a radical surgical approach and reliable intraoperative frozen section analysis. However, at the bone level, intraoperative frozen section analysis is technically impractical due to the required decalcification. Only after decalcification can the entire specimen be assessed for tumor infiltration. In our cohort, a significant discrepancy in terms of bone infiltration was noted between preoperative imaging assessments and postoperative histopathology. CT preoperatively identified bone infiltration in only 8% of our patients. In two thirds of the specimens, no bone infiltration was evident after decalcification and histopathological processing, retrospectively indicating overtreatment by segmental resection; box or marginal resections may have been sufficient in these cases. Therefore, when tumors are adjacent to the bone in CT, MRI should also be performed preoperatively to more reliably detect bone infiltration.

[下颌骨受累口咽癌组织病理学结果的相关性及必要的影像学检查]。
背景:口咽癌患者的手术规划需要适当的成像,尤其要考虑与下颌骨的空间关系。通常需要切除下颌骨的一部分(箱形、边缘或节段切除),同时避免过度治疗。通常情况下,首先要进行计算机断层扫描(CT)。但问题是,仅靠 CT 是否足以可靠地评估下颌骨受累情况:对 25 名年龄在 44-79 岁(平均 62 岁)、接受口咽部分切除术并行下颌骨节段切除的患者进行了研究。分段切除的适应症是基于影像学观察到的肿瘤与下颌骨的密切关系。重建一直使用重建板和游离或足皮瓣进行。将术前影像学结果与下颌骨脱钙后的组织病理学结果进行比较:结果:9 名患者(36%)的下颌骨出现皮质肿瘤浸润。术前,这9名患者中只有2人在CT中发现了清晰的骨浸润;其余7人只有肿瘤与下颌骨的直接接触是明显的。磁共振成像(MRI)显示,这 7 名患者中有 1 人有骨浸润:讨论:遵守安全边际要求采用根治性手术方法和可靠的术中冰冻切片分析。然而,在骨层面,由于需要脱钙,术中冰冻切片分析在技术上并不可行。只有在脱钙后,才能对整个标本进行肿瘤浸润评估。在我们的队列中,术前成像评估和术后组织病理学检查在骨浸润方面存在显著差异。只有8%的患者在术前通过CT发现了骨浸润。三分之二的标本在脱钙和组织病理学处理后没有发现明显的骨浸润,回顾性分析表明节段切除治疗过度;在这些病例中,箱形切除或边缘切除可能已经足够。因此,当 CT 显示肿瘤与骨相邻时,术前也应进行核磁共振成像,以便更可靠地检测骨浸润。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Hno
Hno 医学-耳鼻喉科学
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
33.30%
发文量
116
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: HNO is an internationally recognized journal and addresses all ENT specialists in practices and clinics dealing with all aspects of ENT medicine, e.g. prevention, diagnostic methods, complication management, modern therapy strategies and surgical procedures. Review articles provide an overview on selected topics and offer the reader a summary of current findings from all fields of ENT medicine. Freely submitted original papers allow the presentation of important clinical studies and serve the scientific exchange. Case reports feature interesting cases and aim at optimizing diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Review articles under the rubric ''Continuing Medical Education'' present verified results of scientific research and their integration into daily practice.
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