Pathologic evaluation of primary laryngeal anterior commissure carcinoma both in patients who have undergone open surgery as initial treatment and in those who have undergone salvage surgery after irradiation failure

Laryngeal anterior commissure (AC) cancer has been the subject of much controversy. Our study was aimed at pathologically evaluating the tendency of AC cancer to invade the thyroid cartilage and analyzing the role of thyroid cartilage invasion by tumor cells at the AC as an anatomic cause for irradi...

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Published in:Ear, nose, & throat journal Vol. 90; no. 5; pp. 223 - 225
Main Authors: Ahmed, Wael A, Suzuki, Kenji, Horibe, Yoshimune, Kato, Ichiro, Fujisawa, Toshiyuki, Nishimura, Yoichi
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Sage Publications, Inc 01-05-2011
SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC
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Summary:Laryngeal anterior commissure (AC) cancer has been the subject of much controversy. Our study was aimed at pathologically evaluating the tendency of AC cancer to invade the thyroid cartilage and analyzing the role of thyroid cartilage invasion by tumor cells at the AC as an anatomic cause for irradiation failure. Our study included 36 patients with glottic cancer involving AC. Patients with recurrent or persistent disease after radiotherapy underwent salvage surgery. Surgical specimens from 22 patients who had open surgery, either as primary or salvage surgery, were available for pathologic examination to identify the presence of cartilage invasion. We found microscopic invasion of the thyroid cartilage in 40.9% of the studied tumors. Only 21.4% of patients who had open salvage surgery showed evidence of cartilage invasion at the AC. We concluded that laryngeal AC cancers are more likely to invade the cartilage, and that anatomic risk factors are not the main cause of irradiation failure.
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ISSN:0145-5613
1942-7522
DOI:10.1177/014556131109000508