Aggressive treatment of metastasis to the parotid

2004 
Abstract OBJECTIVES: Assess the value of aggressively treating metastatic lesions in the parotid, taking into account the histology of the disease. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of 13 patients diagnosed with metastasis to the parotid treated by one surgeon in a tertiary referral head and neck unit in the United Kingdom. METHODS: The following variables were reviewed and tabulated: age, sex, histology, latent period to secondary tumour, treatment instituted, postoperative facial nerve outcome, follow-up and survival. RESULTS: Twelve patients were treated aggressively with at least total parotidectomy and adjunctive therapy, whilst one patient required only a superficial parotidectomy. Ten patients had metastatic cutaneous tumours, and three had metastatic adenocarcinoma. Seven of these 13 patients (53.8 %) are alive and well (six had metastatic cutaneous tumours, one had metastatic adenocarcinoma). Four patients succumbed to tumour (two had metastatic cutaneous tumours and two had metastatic adenocarcinoma), and two patients succumbed from unrelated medical causes (both had metastatic cutaneous tumours). The mean follow-up for those alive is 65.9 months and mean follow-up for those deceased is 15.3 months. CONCLUSIONS: In the absence of systemic spread, parotid metastases from primary cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma should be treated aggressively, while metastases from non-cutaneous primary tumours should be approached with caution.
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