Abstract
BACKGROUND Limited data exist on the referral criteria for endoscopic-guided nasopharyngeal biopsy to rule out nasopharyngeal malignancy among adults in a non-endemic area. METHODS Retrospective study of all adult patients that had been referred to our outpatient clinic to undergo endoscopic-guided nasopharyngeal biopsy to exclude nasopharyngeal malignancy between 1/2006-10/2013. All medical consultation referral letters were reviewed, and statistical analyses were conducted to evaluate clinically significant predictors (demographics, clinical manife- stations, nasopharyngeal endoscopic findings) for nasopharyngeal malignancy. RESULTS A total of 470 patients (470 nasopharyngeal biopsies, 54.9% males and 66% smokers) were included. The most common pathological result was adenoid/lymphoid hyperplasia (76.2%). The overall negative rate of all biopsies for malignancy was 94.2%. Twenty-seven patients had nasopharyngeal malignancy: 22 had squamous cell carcinoma and 5 had non-Hodgkin`s lymphoma. Advanced age, cervical mass, and suspicious nasopharyngeal mass were independent risk factors for nasopharyngeal malignancy on univariate and multivariate analyses. CONCLUSIONS Nasopharyngeal biopsy may safely be avoided in adults living in a non-endemic area for NPC who are free of the risk factors of advanced age, the presence of a cervical mass, and suspicious nasopharyngeal mass.
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Abu-Ghanem, S., Carmel, N. N., Horowitz, G., Yehuda, M., Leshno, M., Abu-Ghanem, Y., … Abergel, A. (2015). Nasopharyngeal biopsy in adults: a large-scale study in a non endemic area. Rhinology Journal, 53(2), 142–148. https://doi.org/10.4193/rhin14.130
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