Serous otitis media. An opportunity for early recognition of nasopharyngeal carcinoma
J. S. Sham, W. I. Wei, S. K. Lau, C. C. Yau and D. Choy
Department of Radiotherapy and Oncology, University of Hong Kong and Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong.
In a prospective study of 271 new patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma,
36 (13.3%) were found to have cranial nerve involvement. Serous otitis
media (SOM) was found in 98 (41.4%) of 237 patients who had undergone
complete otologic assessment. The local control of tumor and actuarial
survival of three subgroups of patients, namely, 80 patients with SOM only,
11 patients with cranial nerve palsy only, and 18 patients with both SOM
and cranial nerve palsy, were analyzed. The local control of tumor was
better in patients with SOM alone than in those with cranial nerve palsy
alone; those patients with both SOM and cranial nerve involvement had worse
local control as well as survival. As SOM is not uncommon in the diagnosis
of nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and adult-onset SOM is otherwise distinctly
uncommon, this provides a good opportunity for early recognition and,
perhaps, better control of nasopharyngeal carcinoma.