# Comparative effectiveness of surgery versus radiotherapy for non-nasopharyngeal head and neck lymphoepithelial carcinoma: An IPTW propensity score analysis

**Authors:** Zhen Zheng, Jiaying Wu, Bing Cao, Yanping Bei, Hui Zhang, Kaitai Liu

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0321318 · PLOS One · 2025-04-29

## TL;DR

This study compares surgery and radiotherapy for a rare head and neck cancer, finding surgery may offer better survival after adjusting for confounding factors.

## Contribution

The study provides novel comparative effectiveness data for non-nasopharyngeal head and neck lymphoepithelial carcinoma using IPTW propensity score analysis.

## Key findings

- After IPTW adjustment, surgery was associated with significantly better cancer-specific survival than radiotherapy.
- Subgroup analysis showed improved survival with surgery alone compared to radiotherapy after 60 months.
- Surgery, race, tumor size, and radiotherapy were independent predictors of survival after weighting.

## Abstract

Lymphoepithelial carcinoma (LEC) is a rare head and neck malignancy predominately treated with radiotherapy or surgery. However, comparative effectiveness studies, are lacking for non-nasopharyngeal head and neck LEC (HNLEC).

Patients diagnosed with non-nasopharyngeal HNLEC from 2000–2019 were extracted from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database. Inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to balance baseline characteristics. Cancer-specific survival (CSS) was compared between surgery and radiotherapy groups using Kaplan-Meier analyses and Cox regression before and after IPTW adjustment.

248 patients were included. Before IPTW adjustment, treatment modalities were not significantly associated with CSS in both Kaplan-Meier analysis(p=0.065) and univariate Cox regression(p=0.068). After weighting, Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a significant CSS difference favoring surgery (p=0.015), and univariate Cox regression showed surgery (p=0.018), race (p<0.001), tumor size (p=0.024) and radiotherapy (p=0.0003) as independent predictors. On subgroup analysis of patients receiving single-modality therapy, landmark analysis beyond 60 months showed improved CSS with surgery versus radiotherapy (p<0.001) after IPTW adjustment. Additionally, Kaplan-Meier analysis showed no pre-IPTW (p=0.68) or post-IPTW (p=0.30) CSS differences between surgery alone and surgery plus radiotherapy.

This population-based analysis demonstrated a potential survival advantage of surgery over radiotherapy for non-nasopharyngeal head and neck LEC after accounting for confounding factors. Additional comparative effectiveness data, ideally from controlled studies, are warranted to further investigate optimal treatment strategies.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** lymphoepithelial carcinoma (MONDO:0003572)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HNLEC (MESH:D006258), Cancer (MESH:D009369)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

39 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12040192/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12040192