Radiotherapy or surgery for T2N0M0 glottic carcinoma? A decision-analytic approach.

Decision analysis was used to evaluate the results of treatment of T2N0M0 glottic carcinoma as presented in the literature. Based on mean values for recurrence, salvage eligibility after recurrence and salvage success, the 5-year survival after radiotherapy and surgery proved to be almost identical, 85 and 86%. If the recurrence rates and the salvage rates were varied, a marginal advantage for surgery in small tumours (T2a) and a major advantage in more extended (T2b) tumours was seen if only survival is considered. To take the quality of speech into account, a utility analysis was performed. A utility scale was defined ranging from 0.0 as the value for death, to 1.0 for a successfully irradiated patient with preservation of normal speech. A utility of 0.99 or less for the laryngectomized patient would favour radiotherapy over surgery for all T2 tumours. In patients with T2b tumours and in extreme circumstances, e.g. if failure rates of radiotherapy are extremely high or if recurrence rates after surgery are extremely low, an exact assessment of patient utilities may be pivotal. Under normal circumstances radiotherapy is preferred for T2N0M0 glottic carcinoma if both survival and the quality of speech are taken into account.

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