PATH classification: a proposal for patients with HNSCC treated with salvage surgery

Author
Date
2025-02Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/11351/12704DOI
10.1007/s00405-024-08961-x
ISSN
1434-4726
WOS
001318188700002
PMID
39312000
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of this study is to propose a classification for patients with recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) treated with salvage surgery based on the location of the primary tumor and data commonly found in the pathological report of the resection.
Methods
Retrospective study of 665 patients with HNSCC treated with a salvage surgery after a local and/or regional recurrence of the tumor.
Results
We propose a new postoperative classification for patients with recurrent HNSCC treated with salvage surgery. PATH classification stratifies patients into 4 stages based on the glottic or non-glottic location of the primary tumor, the local and regional pathologic extension of the tumor, the status of the surgical margins, and the presence of lymph node metastases with extracapsular spread. The PATH classification was more homogeneous in the prognosis of patients included in each of its stages, and it had a better prognostic discrimination capacity between stages than the rpTNM classification. According to the PATH classification, the 5-year disease-specific survival was: PATH I (n = 306) 82.8%; PATH II (n = 119) 47.1%; PATH III (n = 202) 24.4%; PATH IV (n = 38) 3.7%. For the rpTNM classification, the 5-year disease-specific survival was: stage I (n = 119) 85.1%; stage II (n = 134) 68.4%; stage III (n = 111) 59.5%; stage IV (n = 301) 33.3%.
Conclusion
The PATH classification for HNSCC patients with local and/or regional recurrence treated with salvage surgery had a better prognostic capacity than the rpTNM classification.
Level of evidence
Level IV.
Keywords
Head and neck cancer; Postoperative prognostic classification; Salvage surgeryBibliographic citation
Llansana A, Virós Porcuna D, Vasquez R, Parellada A, Valero C, Holgado A, et al. PATH classification: a proposal for patients with HNSCC treated with salvage surgery. Eur Arch Oto-Rhino-Laryngology. 2025 Feb;282:971–9.
Audience
Professionals
This item appears in following collections
- HVH - Articles científics [4476]
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