Objectives: Although T stage is an important prognostic tool for oral tongue cancer, it fails to define the depth of invasion and true three-dimensional volume of primary tumors. The purpose of this paper is to determine the relations between tumor volume and lymph node metastasis and survival in early oral tongue cancer.
Methods: Forty-seven patients with T1-2 tongue cancer were included. Tumor volumes were measured by the computerized segmentation of T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging.
Results: The overall average tumor volume was 27.7 cm(3) (range, 1.4 to 60.1 cm(3)). A significant positive correlation was found between tumor volume and pathological T stage, depth of invasion, and cervical lymph node metastasis (P<0.001, P<0.001, and P=0.002, respectively). When the tumor volume exceeded 20 cm(3), the cervical metastasis rate increased to 69.2%. The overall 5-year disease specific survival rate was 80%. There was a statistically significant association between large tumor volume (≥20 cm(3)) and the 5-year disease-specific survival (P=0.046).
Conclusion: Tumor volume larger than 20 cm(3) was associated with greater risk cervical lymph node metastasis and poor 5-year disease-specific survival rate in early oral tongue cancer patients.
Keywords: Computer-assisted image processing; Lymphatic metastasis; Magnetic resonance imaging; Tongue neoplasms; Tumor burden.