Selection Criteria for De-Escalated Chemoradiotherapy for HPV-Related Oropharyngeal Cancer Based on Prognostic Biomarkers or Early Tumor Response to Therapy: A Narrative Review
Avraham Eisbruch, M. P. Sreeram, Karthik Rao, Abbas Agaimy, Luiz P. Kowalski, Andrés Coca Pelaz, Anna Luíza Damaceno Araújo, Orlando Guntinas-Lichius, Juan P. Rodrigo, Fernando Lopez, Sandra Nuyts, Nabil F. Saba, Arlene Forastiere, Carol R. Bradford, Alfio Ferlito

TL;DR
This paper reviews biomarkers and early tumor responses to identify HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer patients who may benefit from less intensive treatment.
Contribution
The paper systematically reviews biomarkers and early response indicators to guide de-escalated therapy in HPV+OPC patients.
Findings
Multiple candidate biomarkers, including molecular and imaging factors, were identified but lack validation for clinical use.
Early tumor response indicators like hypoxia and circulating HPV DNA show promise but require further validation.
Most studies had methodological limitations, such as small cohorts and lack of follow-up data.
Abstract
Backgrounds: Single-arm studies evaluating reduced intensity (de-escalated) therapy for low-risk Human Papillomavirus-related oropharyngeal cancer (HPV+OPC) patients demonstrated high cure rates and reduced toxicity compared with historical results of standard of care (SOC). However, randomized studies demonstrated that the outcomes of de-escalated therapies were inferior to standard therapy, suggesting that a minority of patients may not benefit from de-escalation. Objectives: to review strategies and prognostic biomarkers before or early during therapy to identify low-risk HPV+OPC patients who may require SOC and who should be excluded from de-escalation trials to avoid compromising outcomes. Methods: A comprehensive narrative literature review between January 2000 and August 2025 was performed to identify prognostic biomarkers in HPV+OPC, as well as studies reporting early-response…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHead and Neck Cancer Studies · Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment · Lung Cancer Research Studies
