Novel Approach Aims at Improving Survival in Laryngeal Cancer

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Researchers at the University of Michigan are hoping to improve the survival rates for laryngeal cancer.

There is a new approach to treat patients with advanced laryngeal cancer to improve survival rates. The approach, which was developed by researchers at the University of Michigan, includes administering a single dose of chemotherapy, continuting with chemoradiotherapy for patients who respond, and referring nonresponders to immediate surgery.

“We received survival rates that were in the 80 percent range,” lead study author Gregory T. Wolf, M.D. explains. “This was so encouraging for us, that we decided to make it our standard approach for patients with advanced laryngeal cancer at the University of Michigan.”

Of the 153 patients with stages 3 and 4 advanced laryngeal cancer who were tested by Wolf et al, 71 received a single cycle of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Partial tumor response was used to select patients for definitive chemoradiotherapy, whereas nonresponse was an indication for total laryngectomy. Patients with greater than 50 percent reduction were considered responders.

Can you give an overview of your study?

In an interview with CURE, Wolf, professor and chair emeritus of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery at Michigan Medicine, discussed this trial and his hopes for the future treatment of patients with laryngeal cancer.What we published was a 10-year review of how we treat patients with all stages of laryngeal cancer. The focus was mainly on patients with advanced stage, that is stage 3 and 4 disease, who are traditionally facing possible total laryngectomy as their treatment. Over the past 20 years or so, we've changed the treatment paradigm for these patients to focus on trying to preserve the larynx using a combination of chemotherapy and radiation as an alternative to total laryngectomy.

Although that approach has been widely adapted and viewed as successful, it's never improved the survival rates that could be achieved with surgery alone. In fact, in some large reviews including SEER data, it looked like during this interval from the 1990s to around 2010, that survival rates for this group of patients might be decreasing and that this corresponded to the increased use of chemoradiation for organ preservation purposes.

Back when combined chemotherapy and radiation approaches were being developed, we decided to capitalize on the observation that patients who achieved a response to induction of neoadjuvant chemotherapy had a very favorable prognosis and that it predicted the success of subsequent radiation therapy. Therefore, we began using a single cycle of chemotherapy as a biological indicator of response and using that to select patients for either chemoradiation, in an attempt to preserve the patient’s larynx, or a primary definitive surgery, being total laryngectomy.

We ran a phase 2 pilot trial which began in 1995. We published in 2006 with long follow-up and for the first time, we achieved survival rates that were in the 80 percent range for patients that typically have survival rates of a 50 percent to 60 percent range. This was so encouraging for us that we decided that we would adopt this treatment approach as our standard approach for patients with advanced laryngeal cancer at the University of Michigan.

What are the next steps with this research?

With that as background, we embarked on that for a great number of years and I decided that it was incumbent on us to look at our results and see if we could validate those improved survival rates outside of the clinical trial setting. We think the results are exciting and we believe that our findings validate this treatment approach. What I hope is that other institutions will pick this up. Decision making for patients with advanced head and neck cancer, and laryngeal in particular, is quite complex and when you add in the possibility of radiation therapy alone or concurrent chemoradiation or primary surgery, as well as weighing the risks and benefits and the various morbidities of these treatments and then explaining all that to the patient, it is difficult.

We do the best we can and we've taken a very individualized approach at Michigan by trying to match the treatment to the biology of the tumor. We believe that with that approach, both the patients with poor prognosis, that is the nonresponders, and the patients that have the good prognosis, that is the good responders, will have excellent survival rates. We hope that other places will pick this up and start using it not just for the laryngeal site but for other sites as well.

What questions would your realistically like to see answered in the next five years or so?

The long-term goal is to identify biomarkers that will substitute for having to give the patient chemotherapy upfront. In other words, if we have biomarkers that would tell us that this was a responsive tumor that would help to individualize them and drive our treatments.I would certainly like to see these combination biomarkers to try and match our treatment to the biology of the tumor. If we knew ahead of time that a patient’s tumor was very sensitive to chemotherapy and if we knew that it had a high likelihood of being disseminated, I don't think anybody would operate on that patient. They would go directly to chemotherapy and likewise if they knew the patient had a tumor that wasn't very responsive to radiation, I don't think our radiation oncologists would subject that patient to intensive radiation therapy. We would go a different treatment route and that could be primary surgery or chemotherapy.

Is there anything else you would like to add?

I think the immediate future is individualized care based on biologic markers. Of course, the exciting field that's developing is what role immune modulation will play as a treatment modality when you start integrating it with chemotherapy or surgery or radiation, and I think the next five years will be very exciting for developing immunotherapy as another method of trying to match biology to treatment.There have been several institutions that have picked up this approach and it takes time to change people’s minds but publishing excellent survival rates helps. Most of the people out there will say that Michigan had excellent results because we have an experienced team but we think that this study not only points to the fact that you can get great results with a multidisciplinary team, but also that you can use the response to chemotherapy as a useful aid for picking the right patients. Patients understand this and they understand that when you talk to them about it, they're going to get a test course of chemotherapy and rather than everybody getting assigned to chemoradiation it will help sort out the nonresponders who would actually benefit from immediate surgery and voice rehabilitation.

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