Abstract
Background
We investigated the quality of life (QOL) impact of post‐radiation therapy (RT) superselective/selective neck dissection after de‐intensified chemoradiation for human papillomavirus‐associated oropharynx cancer.
Methods
A total of 147 patients received 60 Gy and weekly low‐dose cisplatin on two phase 2 trials with planned post‐RT neck dissection or surveillance positron emission tomography with neck dissection reserved for salvage. UW‐QOL Shoulder Score, EORTC H&N‐35, and EAT‐10 were assessed.
Results
In all, 48 of 147 patients had post‐RT neck dissection. At 2 years, 37% and 13% of patients receiving post‐RT neck dissection had Shoulder Score ≥ 1 (any shoulder symptoms) and ≥ 2 (symptoms affecting work/hobbies), respectively, versus only 16% and 3% of patients not receiving post‐RT neck dissection. Post‐RT neck dissection was associated with Shoulder Score ≥ 1 (P = 0.005) and Shoulder Score ≥ 2 (P = 0.03) at 2 years, but not H&N‐35 or EAT‐10 scores.
Conclusions
Post‐RT superselective/selective neck dissection was associated with modest but persistent shoulder symptoms. These toxicities should be weighed against the probability of persistent disease when evaluating patients for post‐RT neck dissection.
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