65 research outputs found

    Cancer of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses: A new staging system

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    This study proposes a new staging system for cancer of the paranasal sinuses on the basis of two concepts. The first concept is that the nasal cavity and the paranasal sinuses form a single unit. Consequently, the mucosa of each sinus may give rise to tumors. The histopathologic variation will be the same for all these cavities. The second concept is that the staging of these tumors depends both on the nature of the neoplastic cells and on the specific bone boundaries which surround the anatomic site and subsites. We analyzed 61 cases and we emphasize the need for a differential analysis of T4 tumors depending on which adjacent region is involved

    Changing the staging of oral cancer

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    A comparison between TNM and TANIS stage grouping for predicting prognosis of oral and oropharyngeal cance

    A comparison between TNM and TANIS stage grouping for predicting prognosis of oral and oropharyngeal cancer

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    Purpose: The 1987 TNM classification system modified some T and N definition but it did not change stage grouping. Consequently it has not improved the prognostic validity of the advanced stage groups. In 1993, a new stage grouping was purposed, TANIS, that seems to have a higher correlation with survival. In this report, the TNM classification and TANIS system were compared to evaluate this prognostic ability. Patients and Methods: Data from 164 patients affected by primary cancers of oropharynx or oral cavity were analyzed by means of Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analysis. Results: The crude survival rate at 5 years was 43.9%. Both systems showed a significant correlation with the survival rate by means of Cox regression analysis. TANIS subcategories were correlated to the mortality rate in the stage IV patients. TANIS resulted a better predictor of mortality when compared with TNM. Conclusion: The TANIS system was able to separate the TNM stage IV patients into prognostic groups, yielding more information with respect to TNM for such a category of patients. When a comparison between TNM and TANIS was performed, it was observed that TANIS had a higher correlation with survival rate, whereas TNM did not add any information in defining the survival function
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