Abstract
Clinical features and outcomes of pediatric nasopharyngeal carcinoma: A SEER database study.
Author
Garima Nirmal
Sarvodaya Hospital & Research Center, Faridabad, India
info_outline
Garima Nirmal, Adnan Ali, Neha Gupta, Dinesh Pendharkar
Full text
Authors
Garima Nirmal
Sarvodaya Hospital & Research Center, Faridabad, India
info_outline
Garima Nirmal, Adnan Ali, Neha Gupta, Dinesh Pendharkar
Organizations
Sarvodaya Hospital & Research Center, Faridabad, India, National Cancer Society, New Delhi, India, Sarvodaya Hospital, Faridabad, India, Sarvodaya Hospital, Faridabad, Delhi, India
Abstract Disclosures
Research Funding
No funding received
None.
Background:
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is a rare malignant tumor. Little is known about the clinical, histological and survival characteristics of this disease in pediatric patients.
Methods:
We searched 17 registries of the surveillance, epidemiology, and end results (SEER) database for pediatric patients (£20 years old) with NPC who were diagnosed between 2000 to 2019. Data obtained included the demographics, histological subtype, stage, median household income, place of residence, cause specific survival (CSS) and overall survival (OS). We describe the clinical features and survival outcomes by race of pediatric patients.
Results:
A total of 373 primary pediatric NPC patients were reported between 2000-2019. Median age of diagnosis was 16 years (inter-quartile range 11.5 – 19 years). Of these, 68% were males, 59% were white and 27% were black. Undifferentiated non-keratinizing carcinoma group (WHO type III) was the most frequent (70%) histological sub-type. WHO type I and II disease was found to be present in 12% and 18% cases respectively. Nearly, 4 in 5 patients (83%) had stage III – IV NPC at presentation. Stage I and II disease at presentation was found to be present in 5% and 12% of NPC patients respectively. The median follow-up was 10.1 years. The 5 and 10 year survival estimates were 83% (95% CI 78.8% to 86.9%) and 79% (95% CI 73.9% to 83.1%) respectively. On multivariate Cox regression analysis, gender (Male vs Female: HR: 1.00, 95% CI 0.39-2.57; p = 0.998) and race (White vs Black: HR: 0.81 95% CI 0.311-2.10; p = 0.663) were not found to be significant predictors of survival.
Conclusions:
Pediatric patients at presentation with NPC were more commonly male, had undifferentiated non-keratinizing carcinoma (WHO type III) and stage III-IV disease. Gender and race were not found to be associated with an increased risk for mortality in pediatric patients presenting with NPC.
3 organizations
Organization
Sarvodaya Hospital & Research CenterOrganization
National Cancer SocietyOrganization
Sarvodaya Hospital