Title of article :
An analysis of the treatment of 114 patients with recurrent pleomorphic adenomas of the parotid gland
Author/Authors :
Andrew Renehan، نويسنده , , E. Neville Gleave، نويسنده , , Mark McGurk، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
Background
Nerve preserving surgery is widely recommended for recurrent parotid pleomorphic adenomas though the risk of further relapse may be high. Adjuvant radiotherapy may improve control but its exact role requires clarification.
Methods
A series of 114 patients with first recurrences treated between 1952 and 1992 is reviewed. Treatment modality was either surgery alone (SG; n = 63) or surgery with radiotherapy (SG + RT; n = 51). Results were determined with respect to long-term tumor control (K-M life-tables) and facial nerve function.
Results
The rate to second recurrence was 15% (17/114), median follow-up 14 years. There were no cases of malgnant degeneration. Multinodular recurrences treated by SG were at particular high risk of relapse, but control was significantly improved with adjuvant radiotherapy (SG versus SG = RT; 43% versus 4% at 15 years, P = 0.008). In contrast, no difference was demonstrated in the uninodular tumor group (SG versus SG = RT; 15% versus 13% at 15 years, P = 0.9). The incidence of permanent facial nerve injury was 15%.
Conclusions
This study emphasizes the distinction between multinodular and uninodular recurrences; the former is at high risk of relapse and benefits from adjuvant radiotherapy whereas solitary tumors may be adequately treated by surgery alone.
Journal title :
The American Journal of Surgery
Journal title :
The American Journal of Surgery