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  Vol. 121 No. 11, November 1995 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Blood Transfusion as a Risk Factor for Death in Stage III and IV Operative Laryngeal Cancer

Timothy M. McCulloch, MD; Douglas J. VanDaele; Allen Hillel, MD

Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1995;121(11):1227-1235.


Abstract

Objective
To evaluate the role of a blood transfusion in a patient population with head and neck cancer that was treated with combined therapy (surgery and radiation).

Design
Retrospective, nonrandomized end point study. Univariate and multivariate analysis of 24 variables, including transfusion status.

Setting
The Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study (Cooperative Studies Program 268).

Patients
Patients in the surgical arm of the study (166 patients) underwent surgery and postoperative radiation therapy for advanced (stage III and IV) laryngeal cancer.

Main Outcome Measures
Identification of variables related to patient time to death.

Results
The univariate analysis identified age, clinical N (lymph node) class, primary tumor site, number of pathologically positive lymph nodes, extracapsular spread, pretreatment screening hematocrit, hematocrit and albumin level at 1 month after treatment, intraoperative fluids and units of blood, and total units of blood as significant (P<.05). The stepwise multivariate models identified independent significance in clinical and pathologic node status, hematocrits at both screening and 1 month, extracapsular spread, albumin level at 1 month, age, and primary site. The position of each variable within the individual regression models varied.

Conclusions
Clinical N class or pathologic node status occupied the first position of predictive significance in all models. Blood transfusion status never retained independent significance in any multivariate assessment.

(Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1995;121:1227-1235)



Author Affiliations

The Department of Veterans Affairs Laryngeal Cancer Study Group

From the Departments of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery, University of Iowa, Iowa City (Dr McCulloch and Mr VanDaele) and University of Washington, Seattle (Dr Hillel). A full listing of the members of The Department of Veterans Affairs Laryngeal Cancer Study Group is on page 1230.



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Autologous and Heterologous Blood Transfusion in Head and Neck Cancer Surgery
Moir et al.
Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 1999;125:864-868.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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