HN 06-05Influence of HPV-status on survival of patients with tonsillar squamous cell carcinomas (TSCC) treated by surgery - a 10 year retrospective single centre study

27. HPV and oropharynx / Head and neck cancer
M. Hoffmann 1, S. Gebhardt 1, S. Quabius 1, T. Görögh 1, J. Dunst 2, P. Ambrosch 2.
1Dept. of ORL, H&N Surgery, Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel (Germany), 2Dept. of Radiationoncology, Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel (Germany)

Background / Objectives

The positive prognostic value of HPV-infections in oropharyngeal squamous cell cancer (OSCC) patients has led to the initiation of prospective clinical trials testing the value of treatment de-escalation. It is unclear how to define patients potentially benefiting from de-escalated treatment, whether a positive smoking history impacts survival data and what kind of de-escalation might be best. Here, we investigate the effect of HPV-status, smoking habit and treatment design on overall survival (OS) and progression free survival (PFS) of 126 patients with tonsillar SCC who underwent CO2-laser-surgery and risk adapted adjuvant treatment.


Methods

HPV-DNA-, HPV-mRNA-, and p16INK4A-expression were analyzed and results were correlated to OS and PFS. Factors tested for prognostic value included HPV-status, p16INK4A-protein expression, therapy and smoking habit. Log rank test and p-values ≤0.05 defined significant differences between groups.


Results

The highest accuracy of data with highest significance in this study is given when the HPV-RNA-status is considered. Using p16INK4A-expression alone or in combination with HPV-DNA-status, would have misclassified 23 and 7 patients, respectively. Smoking fully abrogates the positive impact of HPV-infection in TSCC on survival. Non-smoking HPV-positive TSCC patients show 10-year OS of 100% and 90.9% PFS when treated with adjuvant RCT.


Conclusion

In conclusion, the presented data show that high-precision HPV-detection methods are needed, specifically when treatment decisions are based on the results. Furthermore, smoking habit should be included in all studies and clinical trials testing HPV-associated survival. Adjuvant RCT especially for HPV-positive non-smokers may help to avoid distant failure.


References