2017
NSD1- and NSD2-damaging mutations define a subset of laryngeal tumors with favorable prognosis
Peri S, Izumchenko E, Schubert AD, Slifker MJ, Ruth K, Serebriiskii IG, Guo T, Burtness BA, Mehra R, Ross EA, Sidransky D, Golemis EA. NSD1- and NSD2-damaging mutations define a subset of laryngeal tumors with favorable prognosis. Nature Communications 2017, 8: 1772. PMID: 29176703, PMCID: PMC5701248, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-01877-7.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAgedAged, 80 and overCohort StudiesFemaleGene Expression Regulation, NeoplasticHistone MethyltransferasesHistone-Lysine N-MethyltransferaseHumansIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsLaryngeal NeoplasmsMaleMiddle AgedMutationNuclear ProteinsPrognosisRepressor ProteinsSquamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and NeckConceptsUseful clinical metricSquamous cell carcinomaLaryngeal cancer patientsPoor overall survivalIndependent validation cohortDistinct prognostic outcomesMolecular prognostic biomarkersOverall survivalCancer Genome AtlasFavorable prognosisBetter prognosisValidation cohortCell carcinomaCancer patientsLaryngeal tumorsLaryngeal cancerPrognostic outcomesTreatment stratificationPrognostic biomarkerNasal cavityOral cavityHigh recurrenceAnatomical sitesPatient stratificationCancer subtypesResponse
Bledsoe TJ, Park HS, Stahl JM, Yarbrough WG, Burtness BA, Decker RH, Husain ZA. Response. Journal Of The National Cancer Institute 2017, 110: 433-434. PMID: 29121329, DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djx230.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHypofractionated Radiotherapy for Patients with Early-Stage Glottic Cancer: Patterns of Care and Survival
Bledsoe TJ, Park HS, Stahl JM, Yarbrough WG, Burtness BA, Decker RH, Husain ZA. Hypofractionated Radiotherapy for Patients with Early-Stage Glottic Cancer: Patterns of Care and Survival. Journal Of The National Cancer Institute 2017, 109: djx042. PMID: 28521361, DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djx042.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEarly-stage glottic cancerOverall survivalGlottic cancerMultivariable Cox proportional hazards regressionNational Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelinesNational Cancer Data BaseCox proportional hazards regressionPropensity scoreClinical T1 diseaseImproved overall survivalHigh-volume centersProportional hazards regressionLog-rank testPatterns of careRadiation treatment schedulesLarge national databaseCT2 diseaseDefinitive radiotherapyT1 diseaseHypofractionated radiotherapyImproved survivalMultivariable analysisTreatment patternsHazards regressionNetwork guidelines
2010
Nonsurgical management of oropharyngeal, laryngeal, and hypopharyngeal cancer: The Fox Chase Cancer Center experience
Andrews G, Lango M, Cohen R, Feigenberg S, Burtness B, Mehra R, Ahmed S, Nicolaou N, Gaughan J, Ridge JA. Nonsurgical management of oropharyngeal, laryngeal, and hypopharyngeal cancer: The Fox Chase Cancer Center experience. Head & Neck 2010, 33: 1433-1440. PMID: 21928415, DOI: 10.1002/hed.21615.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCancer Care FacilitiesCarcinoma, Squamous CellChemoradiotherapy, AdjuvantCohort StudiesDisease-Free SurvivalFemaleHumansHypopharyngeal NeoplasmsLaryngeal NeoplasmsMaleMiddle AgedNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalOropharyngeal NeoplasmsProportional Hazards ModelsRadiotherapy, ConformalRadiotherapy, Intensity-ModulatedRetrospective StudiesSalvage TherapySmokingConceptsSurvival of patientsNumber of patientsOropharyngeal cancerHypopharyngeal cancerT classificationLaryngeal cancerFox Chase Cancer Center experienceRetrospective single-institution cohort studyMultivariate analysisSingle-institution cohort studyRecurrent oropharyngeal cancerCancer Center experienceRecurrence-free survivalSubset of patientsLaryngeal cancer patientsDisease-related deathEarly T classificationHypopharyngeal cancer treatmentChemotherapy useCurative intentLocoregional controlCohort studyCurrent smokersOverall survivalSalvage surgery