Molecular Diagnosis of Surgical Margins and Local Recurrence in Head and Neck Cancer Patients

Author:

van Houten Viola M. M.1,Leemans C. René1,Kummer J. Alain2,Dijkstra Janny1,Kuik Dirk J.3,van den Brekel Michiel W. M.1,Snow Gordon B.1,Brakenhoff Ruud H.1

Affiliation:

1. 1Otolaryngology/Head-Neck Surgery, Departments of

2. 2Pathology, and

3. 3Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Vrije Universiteit Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractPurpose: Approximately 10–30% of surgically treated head and neck cancer patients develop local recurrences while the resection margins are histologically tumor free. These recurrences may arise from cancer cells left behind but not detected by the pathologist, or they may develop from precursor lesions adjacent to the tumor that were not completely resected. We have investigated whether TP53-mutated DNA in the surgical margins is suitable to identify patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma at risk for local and locoregional recurrence.Experimental Design: In a prospective cohort study of 76 patients with histologically tumor-free margins, the presence of TP53-mutated DNA was determined in the surgical margins using the phage plaque assay and correlated to clinical outcome. Immunostaining of the molecular-positive margins for mutated p53 protein was used to identify whether unresected precursor lesions or residual tumor cells were left behind.Results: The absence of TP53-mutated DNA in surgical margins was significantly associated with remaining free of local and locoregional recurrence (P = 0.027 and P = 0.028, respectively). Moreover, the presence of TP53-mutated DNA in the surgical margins was an independent prognosticator for locoregional recurrence (relative risk = 7.1; P = 0.021; 95% confidence interval, 0.9–56). In 20% of the cases, the presence of TP53-mutated DNA in the surgical margins was found to be related to the presence of tumor-related precursor lesions.Conclusions: This study shows the value of TP53-mutated DNA as a molecular marker to predict locally recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. The observation that all patients who were negative for TP53-mutated DNA in the surgical margins remained free of local recurrence raises hope that molecular analysis of histologically tumor-free surgical margins can be exploited to decide on postoperative radiotherapy. Furthermore, our data provide evidence that local recurrences originate mainly from tumor cells left behind but also originate, in part, from unresected precursor lesions.

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Reference16 articles.

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3. Van Houten VMM, Tabor MP, van den Brekel MWM, et al Mutated p53 as molecular marker for the diagnosis of head and neck cancer. J Pathol, 198: 476-86,  2002.

4. Braakhuis BJM, Tabor MP, Kummer JA, Leemans CR, Brakenhoff RH. A genetic explanation of Slaughter’s concept of field cancerization: evidence and clinical implications. Cancer Res, 63: 1727-30,  2003.

5. Tabor MP, Brakenhoff RH, van Houten VMM, et al Persistence of genetically altered fields in head and neck cancer patients: biological and clinical implications. Clin Cancer Res, 7: 1523-32,  2001.

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