Management of 80 sinonasal undifferentiated carcinomas. Retrospective multicentre study of the French Network of Rare Head and Neck Cancers (REFCOR)

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Pouvreau, Pierre | Coelho, Julien | Rumeau, Cécile | Malard, Olivier | Garrel, Renaud | Michel, Justin | Righini, Christian | Vergez, Sebastien | Baudouin, Robin | Bastit, Vianney | Marie, Jean-Paul | Villepelet, Aude | Moya-Plana, Antoine | Philouze, Pierre | Saroul, Nicolas | Digue, Laurence | Daste, Amaury | Renard, Sophie | Moriniere, Sylvain | Carsuzaa, Florent | Verillaud, Benjamin | Poissonnet, Gilles | Schultz, Philippe | Brenet, Esteban | Mouawad, François | Thariat, Juliette | Vulquin, Noémie | Castain, Claire | de Gabory, Ludovic | Dupin, Charles

Edité par CCSD ; WB Saunders -

International audience. Objectives: Sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) is a rare and aggressive disease requiring multimodal treatment, and multiple new entities once included in the spectrum of SNUC, such as SWI/SNF-deficient carcinomas, are emerging. We aimed to provide new data regarding the role of chemotherapy and surgery and the prognostic factors of disease-free survival.Methods: This study was based on data from the REFCOR database and included patients with SNUC treated with curative intent from 2007 to 2021 across 22 centres in France.Results: A total of 80 patients were included in the analysis. Among the entire cohort, the 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were 58% and 63%, respectively. Of 100% of the patients treated with irradiation, 29% underwent surgery, 56% neoadjuvant chemotherapy (82% had either a partial or a complete response) and 76% chemoradiotherapy. No treatment modality was associated with a better OS or DFS, including surgery (p = 0.34). There was a trend for a better DFS for the patients treated with chemotherapy (neoadjuvant or concomitant, p = 0.062). Overall survival at 3 years was 58% for SWI/SNF deficient group and 86% for non deficient group (p = 0.14). The locoregional relapse rate without distant metastases was 21% in the exclusive radiotherapy group and 26% in the surgery group. Grade 3 or higher toxicities concerned 9%, 32% and 29% of patients for surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy respectively.Conclusion: In the management of localised SNUC among all patients treated with irradiation, surgery yielded no benefit, whereas the addition of chemotherapy tended to improve disease-free survival.

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