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. 2022 Nov:134:106130.
doi: 10.1016/j.oraloncology.2022.106130. Epub 2022 Sep 24.

Concurrent chemoradiotherapy with cisplatin given once-a-week versus every-three weekly in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma: Non-inferior, equivalent, or superior?

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Concurrent chemoradiotherapy with cisplatin given once-a-week versus every-three weekly in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma: Non-inferior, equivalent, or superior?

Tejpal Gupta et al. Oral Oncol. 2022 Nov.

Abstract

Cisplatin-based concurrent chemoradiotherapy is the contemporary standard-of-care in curative-intent management of loco-regionally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. The most optimal dose-schedule of concurrent cisplatin remains debatable with widespread variability in clinical practice. High-quality evidence in favour of cisplatin-based chemoradiotherapy is largely based on high-dose cisplatin given as 100 mg/m2 every three-weekly for up to three cycles. However, such dosing is typically associated with high rates of significant acute hematological and renal toxicity prompting the need for alternative lesser toxic dose-schedules. Compliance to three doses of three-weekly high-dose cisplatin is reportedly suboptimal with nearly 40% of patients unable to receive the third cycle thereby achieving cumulative cisplatin dose of 200 mg/m2 which is generally regarded sufficient for beneficial anti-tumor effect. The most common alternative schedule is low-dose (20-50 mg/m2) cisplatin once-weekly during radiotherapy. Such low-dose weekly regimens have undergone less rigorous prospective evaluation versus RT alone but continue to be widely used in co-operative group trials and routine clinical practice. In the last decade, several small prospective randomized controlled trials have reported significantly lesser toxicity and comparable disease-related outcomes with low-dose weekly cisplatin. However, two recent randomized controlled trials have re-ignited the debate globally due to their contradictory results, inferences, and conclusions. Through this commentary, we critically appraise and summarize the existing evidence-base to inform contemporary clinical practice and guide future research. There is increasingly emerging evidence that chemoradiotherapy with once-weekly cisplatin is non-inferior to three-weekly cisplatin for disease-related outcomes in curative-intent management of loco-regionally advanced head and neck cancer.

Keywords: Cisplatin; Concurrent; Dose; Head-neck cancer; Non-inferiority; Radiotherapy.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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