Ending 40 years of silence: Rationale for a new staging system for soft tissue sarcoma of the head and neck Review


Authors: Hahn, E.; Huang, S. H.; Hosni, A.; Razak, A. A.; Jones, R. L.; Dickson, B. C.; Sturgis, E. M.; Patel, S. G.; O'Sullivan, B.
Review Title: Ending 40 years of silence: Rationale for a new staging system for soft tissue sarcoma of the head and neck
Abstract: The tumor, node, metastases (TNM) anatomic staging system plays a pivotal role in cancer care, research, and cancer control activities. Since the first edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer TNM staging classification published in 1977, soft tissue sarcomas have been staged in an anatomic site agnostic fashion whereby the primary tumor size (T) was categorized as T1 if <=5 cm and T2 if >5 cm; this remained unchanged through the 7th edition of the TNM. However, soft tissue sarcomas of the head and neck (STSHN) usually present smaller than sarcomas of other sites, but carry a disproportionate risk of local recurrence. Up to 70% of tumors are less than 5 cm at presentation, and therefore classified together as T1. Given the rarity of STSHN, there is a paucity of data to guide progress in their classification. Moreover, the majority of publications only report tumor size as less than or greater than 5 cm, presumably based on conventions of the TNM system that remained unchanged for 40 years, thereby affecting progress of STSHN classification. This formed the impetus for change in the 8th edition in 2 key ways: 1) several soft tissue sarcoma site based changes occurred including STSHN now having its own system, and 2) primary tumor size cut-offs of 2 cm and 4 cm used in STSHN now reflect sizes that head and neck specialists commonly encounter in their practice. This update was pragmatic in modifying the TNM from a system with a T category not serving STSHN and which was originally based on sarcoma data from non-head and neck anatomic sites. The background to this change is outlined which provides a framework in which data can be reported to generate evidence for future staging modifications. © 2018 The Authors
Keywords: cancer surgery; survival rate; histopathology; review; squamous cell carcinoma; cancer radiotherapy; disease free survival; cancer staging; nuclear magnetic resonance imaging; positron emission tomography; lymph node metastasis; mitosis; tumor localization; computer assisted tomography; tumor volume; smoking; cell differentiation; necrosis; prediction; dysphagia; head and neck cancer; soft tissue sarcoma; rhabdomyosarcoma; epistaxis; head and neck tumor; cranial neuropathy; nose obstruction; hoarseness; surgical margin; exophthalmos; clinical outcome; cancer prognosis; tnm staging; human; priority journal
Journal Title: Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology
Volume: 15
ISSN: 2405-6308
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2019-02-01
Start Page: 13
End Page: 19
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ctro.2018.11.009
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC6293017
PUBMED: 30582016
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- Export Date: 1 October 2019 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Snehal G Patel
    412 Patel