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Authors Di L, Qian K, Du C, Shen C, Zhai R, He X, Wang X, Xu T, Hu C, Ying H
Received 28 August 2018
Accepted for publication 21 October 2018
Published 21 November 2018 Volume 2018:10 Pages 6071—6078
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S185542
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Amy Norman
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Rituraj Purohit
Background: Salivary duct
carcinoma (SDC) is an extremely rare and highly malignant carcinoma, and
surgical radical resection is the most effective therapy. However, there were
quite a proportion of patients receiving non-radical resections, and how to
treat them remained controversial. Thus, the aim of this study is to evaluate
whether postoperative radiotherapy could be a salvage treatment of SDC in major
salivary glands without radical operations.
Patients and methods: We
identified 40 pathologically diagnosed SDC patients who came to our hospital
and did not receive radical operations. Thirty-three patients received at least
one treatment (remedial operation, postoperative radiotherapy and
chemotherapy), and seven patients only chose observation and received no
further treatment. The prognostic indicators of the local–regional control
(LRC) and distant disease-free survival were analyzed using the Kaplan–Meier
methods and the Cox proportional hazards regression models.
Results: Thirteen
patients experienced local–regional recurrence or local progression, and
distant metastases were observed in 15 patients. Through multivariate analysis,
we found that postoperative radiotherapy was associated with better LRC, but
this kind of treatment did not show significant efficacy in the prevention of
distant metastasis.
Conclusion: SDC is a rare,
aggressive malignancy, and a substantial proportion of these patients
experienced inadequate initial treatments. Although postoperative radiotherapy
could not decrease distant metastases, it might help to improve LRC in patients
with SDC.
Keywords: salivary duct
carcinoma, prognosis, non-radical resection, postoperative radiotherapy
