Non-HPV-Related Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma in a Young Patient Cohort

Objectives: Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is rare in patients younger than 40 years. Many practitioners suspect HNSCC is a more aggressive disease in this age group, and perhaps increasing in incidence; however, there are scant and conflicting data to support this assertion. We sought to compare outcomes for young patients with non-human papillomavirus (HPV)–related HNSCC to those of older patients. Methods: A retrospective chart review of patients with HNSCC treated from 2004 to 2016 at 2 tertiary referral centers. Patients aged 18 to 40 with p16-negative HNSCC were included in the young patient cohort (n = 59). A randomly selected stage- and subsite-matched cohort aged 55 to 65 was analyzed for comparison (n = 114). Results: When considering all patients with HNSCC, patients younger than 40 were more likely to have oral tongue cancer (62.7%) compared to patients age 55 to 65 (16.9%). When an older patient cohort was stage- and subsite-matched to the young patient cohort, there were more never smokers (49.2% vs 17.5% of older patients, P < .01) and females (40.7% vs 24.6% of older patients, P = .028) in the young patient group. The young patient cohort had better average overall survival than the older group (14.4 vs 8.1 years, respectively, P = .02), but similar average disease-free survival (6.2 years vs 6.6 years, respectively, P = .67); 50.9% of young patients had tumors with adverse histologic features versus 42.0% of older patients (P = .28). The young patients demonstrated a superior average conditional survival after recurrence (9.8 years vs 3.2 years for older patients, P < .01). Conclusions: Despite the limitations of study design, these data suggest that young patients who develop non-HPV-related HNSCC tend to have similarly aggressive disease, but longer overall survival and better survival after recurrence. These findings may be attributable to better overall health as evidenced by fewer comorbidities.

[1]  F. Fonseca,et al.  Molecular basis of oral squamous cell carcinoma in young patients: Is it any different from older patients? , 2018, Journal of oral pathology & medicine : official publication of the International Association of Oral Pathologists and the American Academy of Oral Pathology.

[2]  M. Meyerson,et al.  Clinical, genomic, and metagenomic characterization of oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma in patients who do not smoke , 2015, Head & neck.

[3]  J. Malicki,et al.  Oral cavity and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma in young adults: a review of the literature , 2014, Radiology and oncology.

[4]  L. Thorne,et al.  Association of p16INK4a overexpression with improved outcomes in young patients with squamous cell cancers of the oral tongue , 2011, Head & neck.

[5]  D. Hayes,et al.  Increasing incidence of oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma in young white women, age 18 to 44 years. , 2011, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[6]  C. Moskaluk,et al.  Intensity‐modulated radiotherapy outcomes for oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma patients stratified by p16 status , 2010, Cancer.

[7]  D. Hayes,et al.  Never‐smokers, never‐drinkers: Unique clinical subgroup of young patients with head and neck squamous cell cancers , 2009, Head & neck.

[8]  A. Guimarães,et al.  Analysis of 724 cases of primary head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) with a focus on young patients and p53 immunolocalization. , 2009, Oral oncology.

[9]  M. Toner,et al.  Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma in the Young: A Spectrum or a Distinct Group? Part 1 , 2009, Head and neck pathology.

[10]  W. Westra The Changing Face of Head and Neck Cancer in the 21st Century: The Impact of HPV on the Epidemiology and Pathology of Oral Cancer , 2009, Head and neck pathology.

[11]  W. Mendenhall,et al.  Impact of young age on prognosis for head and neck cancer: A matched‐pair analysis , 2005, Head & neck.

[12]  B. O'Sullivan,et al.  A Matched Control Study of Treatment Outcome in Young Patients With Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck , 1999, The Laryngoscope.

[13]  J. Shah,et al.  Squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue in young patients: A matched‐pair analysis , 1998, Head & neck.