Introduction: Major salivary gland carcinomas (MSGCs) are rare, heterogeneous malignancies with high recurrence rates. Recurrent-metastatic (RM) MSGCs frequently represent a clinical challenge due to their unpredictable behavior and the absence of established prognostic markers for the disease course of relapsed disease. Materials and methods: This multicenter retrospective study, involving 10 tertiary centers worldwide, included patients affected by loco-regional and/or distant relapse after surgery with curative intent. The study aimed to analyze residual survival (recurrent-metastatic survival, RMS) and identify key prognostic factors to support personalized treatment strategies, especially for exclusive loco-regional and distant recurrences. Results: Among 212 patients, the median disease-free interval (DFI) after the initial treatment was 14 months, with a 1-year RMS of 58.1% (95% CI, 51.6-65.6%). Longer DFI (>30 months), adenoid cystic carcinoma histology, loco-regional recurrence rather than failure at distance, and absence of nodal metastasis (pN0) at initial diagnosis were significantly associated with a better residual overall survival. In patients with exclusive loco-regional recurrence, independent positive prognostic factors included DFI, salvage surgery, primary low-grade tumor, and lower pT classification. In contrast, for patients with exclusive distant metastasis, longer DFI (>30 months) and the type of intervention (metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease) were independent prognosticators. Conclusion: Disease-free interval is a key prognostic factor for the residual overall survival after a recurrence event. Primary tumor characteristics were associated with survival outcomes in the loco-regional recurrent setting, but not if the recurrence is at distance. Whenever feasible, salvage surgery for loco-regional recurrence and metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease may be considered in highly selected patients.

Introduction: Major salivary gland carcinomas (MSGCs) are rare, heterogeneous malignancies with high recurrence rates. Recurrent-metastatic (RM) MSGCs frequently represent a clinical challenge due to their unpredictable behavior and the absence of established prognostic markers for the disease course of relapsed disease. Materials and methods: This multicenter retrospective study, involving 10 tertiary centers worldwide, included patients affected by loco-regional and/or distant relapse after surgery with curative intent. The study aimed to analyze residual survival (recurrent-metastatic survival, RMS) and identify key prognostic factors to support personalized treatment strategies, especially for exclusive loco-regional and distant recurrences. Results: Among 212 patients, the median disease-free interval (DFI) after the initial treatment was 14 months, with a 1-year RMS of 58.1% (95% CI, 51.6–65.6%). Longer DFI (>30 months), adenoid cystic carcinoma histology, loco-regional recurrence rather than failure at distance, and absence of nodal metastasis (pN0) at initial diagnosis were significantly associated with a better residual overall survival. In patients with exclusive loco-regional recurrence, independent positive prognostic factors included DFI, salvage surgery, primary low-grade tumor, and lower pT classification. In contrast, for patients with exclusive distant metastasis, longer DFI (>30 months) and the type of intervention (metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease) were independent prognosticators. Conclusion: Disease-free interval is a key prognostic factor for the residual overall survival after a recurrence event. Primary tumor characteristics were associated with survival outcomes in the loco-regional recurrent setting, but not if the recurrence is at distance. Whenever feasible, salvage surgery for loco-regional recurrence and metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease may be considered in highly selected patients.

Prognostic factors and survival after recurrence in major salivary gland carcinomas: a multicenter study

Bossi, Paolo
2026-01-01

Abstract

Introduction: Major salivary gland carcinomas (MSGCs) are rare, heterogeneous malignancies with high recurrence rates. Recurrent-metastatic (RM) MSGCs frequently represent a clinical challenge due to their unpredictable behavior and the absence of established prognostic markers for the disease course of relapsed disease. Materials and methods: This multicenter retrospective study, involving 10 tertiary centers worldwide, included patients affected by loco-regional and/or distant relapse after surgery with curative intent. The study aimed to analyze residual survival (recurrent-metastatic survival, RMS) and identify key prognostic factors to support personalized treatment strategies, especially for exclusive loco-regional and distant recurrences. Results: Among 212 patients, the median disease-free interval (DFI) after the initial treatment was 14 months, with a 1-year RMS of 58.1% (95% CI, 51.6–65.6%). Longer DFI (>30 months), adenoid cystic carcinoma histology, loco-regional recurrence rather than failure at distance, and absence of nodal metastasis (pN0) at initial diagnosis were significantly associated with a better residual overall survival. In patients with exclusive loco-regional recurrence, independent positive prognostic factors included DFI, salvage surgery, primary low-grade tumor, and lower pT classification. In contrast, for patients with exclusive distant metastasis, longer DFI (>30 months) and the type of intervention (metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease) were independent prognosticators. Conclusion: Disease-free interval is a key prognostic factor for the residual overall survival after a recurrence event. Primary tumor characteristics were associated with survival outcomes in the loco-regional recurrent setting, but not if the recurrence is at distance. Whenever feasible, salvage surgery for loco-regional recurrence and metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease may be considered in highly selected patients.
2026
Introduction: Major salivary gland carcinomas (MSGCs) are rare, heterogeneous malignancies with high recurrence rates. Recurrent-metastatic (RM) MSGCs frequently represent a clinical challenge due to their unpredictable behavior and the absence of established prognostic markers for the disease course of relapsed disease. Materials and methods: This multicenter retrospective study, involving 10 tertiary centers worldwide, included patients affected by loco-regional and/or distant relapse after surgery with curative intent. The study aimed to analyze residual survival (recurrent-metastatic survival, RMS) and identify key prognostic factors to support personalized treatment strategies, especially for exclusive loco-regional and distant recurrences. Results: Among 212 patients, the median disease-free interval (DFI) after the initial treatment was 14 months, with a 1-year RMS of 58.1% (95% CI, 51.6-65.6%). Longer DFI (>30 months), adenoid cystic carcinoma histology, loco-regional recurrence rather than failure at distance, and absence of nodal metastasis (pN0) at initial diagnosis were significantly associated with a better residual overall survival. In patients with exclusive loco-regional recurrence, independent positive prognostic factors included DFI, salvage surgery, primary low-grade tumor, and lower pT classification. In contrast, for patients with exclusive distant metastasis, longer DFI (>30 months) and the type of intervention (metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease) were independent prognosticators. Conclusion: Disease-free interval is a key prognostic factor for the residual overall survival after a recurrence event. Primary tumor characteristics were associated with survival outcomes in the loco-regional recurrent setting, but not if the recurrence is at distance. Whenever feasible, salvage surgery for loco-regional recurrence and metastasectomy for oligometastatic disease may be considered in highly selected patients.
Adenoid-cystic carcinoma
Distant metastasis
Metastasectomy
Parotid cancer
Recurrence
Salivary gland cancer
Salvage surgery
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11699/106256
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact