# Clinical Outcomes for Nasopharyngeal Cancer in Non-Asian Patients: A Single-Center Experience

**Authors:** Renata Zahu, Daniela Urian, Vlad Manolescu, Andrei Ungureanu, Carmen Bodale, Alexandru Iacob, Stefan Cristian Vesa, Cristina Tiple, Gabriel Kacso

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14041177 · 2025-02-11

## TL;DR

This study reports survival outcomes for non-Asian nasopharyngeal cancer patients in Romania, showing good disease control despite advanced stages.

## Contribution

The study presents the largest Romanian retrospective series of NPC survival data in non-Asian patients.

## Key findings

- Concomitant chemotherapy significantly improved survival in non-Asian NPC patients.
- High cumulative Cisplatin dose was associated with better survival outcomes.
- Despite advanced stages, the cohort showed good disease control with 3-year survival rates above 73%.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: According to Globocan, Romania has the highest incidence of nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) in Europe. Our objective was to evaluate the survival data for a cohort of non-Asian patient population treated with curative intent at a tertiary cancer center in Romania. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 161 patients with histologically proven, non-metastatic NPC treated at our institution between October 2014 and December 2021 with intensity modulated arc radiotherapy (IMRT) with or without neoadjuvant or concomitant chemotherapy according to the stage of the disease. Kaplan-Meier estimates of overall, disease-free, locoregional relapse free and distant metastasis free survival were calculated. The log-rank test was used to determine significant prognostic determinants of overall and disease-free survival. Results: The median age was 50 years (range 19–80), 88% had nonkeratinizing undifferentiated carcinoma. Epstein Barr virus status was not evaluated routinely. 42.2% of patients were stage III and 46% stage IVA disease. Induction chemotherapy was prescribed for 72.7% of patients and 89.4% received concurrent chemotherapy. After a median follow up of 44 months (range: 3.6, 104.7 months), the estimated 3 years overall, disease free, locoregional relapse free and distant metastasis free survival of the entire cohort were 82.6%, 73.3%, 83.2% and 86.3% respectively. On testing interactions, concomitant chemotherapy offered significant survival benefit (HR—0.287; 95% CI 0.137–0.603; p = 0.001) and cumulative Cisplatin dose of more than 100 mg/mp was statistically significant for survival (HR—0.350;95% CI 0.157–0.779; p = 0.01) Conclusions: This is the largest retrospective series of nasopharyngeal cancer from Romania reporting survival data. Despite the high percentage of advanced stage disease our data shows very good disease control. Compliance to optimal concomitant chemotherapy should represent a priority in clinical practice in a non-Asian patient population.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** Cisplatin (PubChem CID 5460033)
- **Diseases:** nasopharyngeal cancer (MONDO:0015459)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cancer (MESH:D009369), IVA disease (MESH:C538167), NPC (MESH:D009303), undifferentiated carcinoma (MESH:D002277), metastasis (MESH:D009362)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], human gammaherpesvirus 4 (Epstein Barr virus, no rank) [taxon 10376]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11856680/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11856680