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Cancer of The Floor of the Mouth

these are usually squamous cancers that arise as a sore under the edge of the tongue (the floor of mouth...see picture#1 and picture #2.)) these cancers can be treated with surgery or radiation (see NCCN guidelines for early or advanced lesions and the radiation dose.) 

see: NCI Site , NCI patient siteNIH BookletACS Site, Mayo Clinic, and Side Effects Information   see picture of typical radiation port film for floor of mouth cancer, more port diagrams if the tongue is involved or field if the tongue is not involved , neck nodes, neck nodes at risk and more   neck nodes at risk

local control for early lesions is quite good with radiation, particularly with implants, more advanced cancers usually require surgery plus radiation


Treatment Results for Floor Of Mouth Cancer
(Chao 2004/ IMRT)
  Number Number   Local Control Local Control Survival/5y Survival/5y
Author T1-2 T3-4 Therapy T1/T2 T3/T4 T1/T2 T3/T4
Wang 174 61 RT 90%/72% 24%/23% 85%/56% 7%/13%
Rodgers 73 25 RT 86%/69% 55%/40% 96%/70% 67%/ 1/5
  22 2 S 90%/75% 62% 83%/66%  
Fu 153 - RT 90%/81% 67%/ 83%/71% 43%/10%
Nason 114 75 S - - 69%/64% 46%/26%
Gilbert 40 15 RT 85%/50% 20% 73%/37% 25%
 
Floor of Mouth Control with Radiation   Abeloff. Clin Onc:978
Stage Control Rate
T1
T2
T3
T4
74 - 98%
36 - 95%
13 - 77%
21 - 33%
Generally small lesions are treated with either surgery or radiation. Radiation has the advantage of including the regional neck nodes. Much of the radiation literature includes interstitial therapy (i.e. placing needles or wires through the tumor) This may have slightly better control rates but probably increase the complication rate as noted by CC Wang (Rad Ther for Head and Neck Cancer 1983:97)

Radiation for T1,T2 FOM from Wang
  External Beam Ext + Implant Implant Alone
Control Rate 61% 69% 77%
Complications 6% 29% 55%

Recent  Literature
Ann Surg 1983 Jan;197(1):34-41

Intra-oral cancer at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Squamous cell carcinoma of the floor of the mouth.

Ildstad ST, Bigelow ME, Remensnyder JP

A retrospective review of 163 consecutive patients with biopsy-proven, invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the floor of the mouth who underwent inpatient treatment at the Massachusetts General Hospital during the 15-year period from January 1962 through December 1976 is presented. The stage at first presentation, clinical features of the disease, incidence of second primary tumors, analysis of therapeutic modalities, and survival statistics are compared with reports from other large centers. Floor of mouth tumors comprised 28%, (163/592) of oral squamous cell carcinomas seen at the Massachusetts General Hospital during that time period. Seventy-one per cent of floor of mouth tumors were in men and 29% in women; women tended to present earlier in the course of their disease. Thirty-seven patients (23%) developed a secondary primary malignancy, and four of these 37 patients developed two second primaries. Distant metastatic disease appeared in 6% of patients with Stage I, II, or III disease and 26% of patients with Stage IV disease. Radiation therapy alone and surgery alone resulted in equivalent long-term survival rates for early stage disease. In more advanced stages (III and IV), a combined approach utilizing surgery and radiation therapy obtained superior results for short-term survival than either modality alone. The importance of early diagnosis and treatment and suggestions for development of cooperative protocols in an attempt to improve salvage of patients with this disease is discussed.

Radiother Oncol 1991 Jul;21(3):183-92

Interstitial irradiation for carcinoma of the tongue and floor of mouth: Royal Marsden Hospital Experience 1970-1986.

Dearnaley DP, Dardoufas C, A'Hearn RP, Henk JM

Academic Radiotherapy Unit, Royal Marsden Hospital, Sutton, Surrey, U.K.

One hundred and forty nine patients with carcinoma of the tongue or floor of mouth were treated with interstitial irradiation (+/- external beam therapy) using caesium needles or iridium wires between 1970 and 1986. Multivariate analysis showed the main predictors of outcome to be tumour stage, site and histology. Caesium and iridium techniques gave similarly good local control rates of 90% at 5 years for T1 and T2 tumours when used as the standard departmental method. Local failure was shown to have a major impact on the risk of dying from disease and elective neck irradiation (ENI) conferred a favourable benefit on neck control and survival provided the primary site was controlled. Patients less than 40 years of age appeared to have an unfavourable prognosis. Radical irradiation including interstitial techniques gives excellent results in early oral cancer and is the treatment of choice for T2 tumours. We recommend elective neck irradiation in patients at high risk of developing lymph node metastases.

Head Neck 1997 Aug;19(5):400-5

Squamous cell carcinoma of the floor of mouth: a 20-year review.

Hicks WL Jr, Loree TR, Garcia RI, Maamoun S, Marshall D, Orner JB, Bakamjian VY, Shedd DP

Division of Head and Neck Surgery, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, New York 14263, USA.

BACKGROUND: This study retrospectively examines our treatment choices and outcomes with patients diagnosed with squamous cell cancer of the floor of mouth. Because of our division's past strong surgical bias in the treatment of this disease, we have assessed the results of a patient population treated largely by surgical extirpation. Four hundred fifty patients with the diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity received their primary treatment at Roswell Park Cancer Center (RPCI) from 1971 to 1991. Ninety-nine had disease originating in the floor of mouth and are the basis of this retrospective review. RESULTS: Forty-three percent of the patients had early-stage disease (stage I or II). Five-year survival for stages I through IV was 95%, 86%, 82%, and 52%, respectively. The incidence of occult cervical metastases for clinical stage I patients was 21%. For clinical stage II patients, the incidence was 62%. Local control of patients treated with surgery alone was 81%. The regional control rate for these patients was 71%. In patients where negative margins were achieved (> or = 5 mm), the local recurrence rate was 13%, regardless of T stage. Eleven percent of the patients underwent a course of postoperative radiotherapy; all had stage IV disease. When compared with advanced-stage patients undergoing surgery alone, there was a significantly improved regional control rate and a trend toward enhanced survival in the patients receiving adjuvant radiotherapy. CONCLUSIONS: There is a significantly high incidence of occult metastatic disease (21%) for T1 lesions or greater in floor of mouth cancer to warrant elective treatment of regional lymphatics. In patients treated with surgery alone with negative margins, the local control rate was 90% versus 62% when the margins were close or positive. Adjunctive radiotherapy showed a statistically significant (p = .005) increased regional control in patients with stage IV disease. Adjunctive radiotherapy is warranted for increased regional control of disease; good local control can be achieved in floor of mouth cancer with surgery alone when negative margins are obtained.

Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1990 Jun;18(6):1299-306

Iridium-192 curietherapy for T1 and T2 epidermoid carcinomas of the floor of mouth.

Mazeron JJ, Grimard L, Raynal M, Haddad E, Piedbois P, Martin M, Marinello G, Nair RC, Le Bourgeois JP, Pierquin B

Service de Radiotherapie, Hopital Henri Mondor, Creteil, France.

From 1970 to 1986, 117 patients with T1 (47) or T2 (70) epidermoid carcinomas of the floor of the mouth (SCC) were treated by iridium-192 implantation (192 Ir). The dose was prescribed according to the Paris System and varied over those years. Follow-up information was available on 116 patients. There were 46 T1N0, 47 T2N0, and 23 T2N1-3. Neck management varied for the 93 N0 patients consisting of surveillance (24 T1, 17 T2) or elective neck dissection (22 T1:all pN-, 30 T2: 20 pN-, 10 pN+). Cause specific survival rates were 94% for T1N0, 61.5% for T2N0, and 28% for T2N1-3 at 5 years. Primary local control was 93.5%, 74.5%, and 65%, respectively, and 98%, 79%, and 65% after salvage. Patients with gingival extension or a tumor size over 3 cm (T2b) had a local control of 50% (9/18) and 58% (15/26), respectively. Nodal control was 93.5% for Stage I, 85% for Stage II, and 48% for T2N1-3 patients. There was no difference in nodal control with regard to treatment policy for Stage I-II patients. There were few complications including three deaths: two from surgery and one from 192 Ir. Nodal status, tumor size defined as T1, T2a (less than or equal to 3 cm), T2b (greater than 3 cm), and gingival extension were the only independent prognostic factors. The management of T1N0 and T2N0 SCC by 192 Ir to a dose of 65 or 70 Gy, using the Paris System, is recommended for lesions 3 cm or less and without gingival extension.

Head Neck Surg 1984 Oct;7(1):15-21

The incidence of occult metastases for cancer of the oral tongue and floor of the mouth: treatment rationale.

Teichgraeber JF, Clairmont AA

One hundred thirty-six surgical cases of squamous cell carcinoma of the oral tongue and floor of the mouth at the Emory University Hospitals were reviewed for the incidence of occult metastases. Thirty-five percent of the T1 T2 lesions of the anterior tongue had occult metastases. The figure was 31.5% for similarly staged lesions of the floor of the mouth. The presence of regional metastases resulted in a 2-year determinate survival rate of 37% and 32% for patients with oral tongue and floor of the mouth lesions, respectively. The poor prognosis in the study for delayed cervical metastases and the high incidence of occult cervical metastases have led the authors to propose a more aggressive therapy for the clinically negative necks in these two sites of squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity.