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Outcomes for sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC): an international multi-center retrospective cohort study

Outcomes for sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC): an international multi-center retrospective cohort study
Outcomes for sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC): an international multi-center retrospective cohort study

Background: sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) is an extremely rare, high-grade, and aggressive tumor of the sinonasal tract. Due to the rarity of this malignancy, current treatment guidelines are based on small and often/mainly single-center retrospective datasets. In the absence of a universally accepted standard of care for SNUC, treatment approaches vary across countries and institutions, reflecting real-world clinical practice. The primary aim of this study was to describe real-world treatment and outcomes for patients with confirmed SNUC. 

Methods: this was an international, multi-center, retrospective, observational cohort study that pooled patients into the largest SNUC dataset to date. Fifteen centers were enrolled to contribute data, including seven from Europe, four from the United States, three from the United Kingdom, and one from Canada. In the absence of a universally accepted standard of care for SNUC, treatment approaches varied across countries and institutions, reflecting real-world clinical practice. Patients included were those with histologically confirmed SNUC who were treated between 1997 and 2021. 

Results: this study yielded 485 patients treated for SNUC. The median age at diagnosis was 55.6 years (IQR: 44.5–67.6), and 63.7% were male. Most cases presented at advanced stages, with 70.8% as T4a or T4b. Overall survival (OS) outcomes were available for 412 patients, with a median follow-up of 26.0 months. The 5- and 10-year OS were 47.2% (95% CI: 40.8–53.3%) and 39.6% (95% CI: 32.5–46.6%), respectively. Advanced age, dichotomized T-stage (T4a/b vs. T1–3), M-stage, and orbital involvement were significant poor prognostic factors on univariable analysis (p’s < 0.01). On multivariable analysis, orbital involvement (HR: 2.73, 95% CI: 1.42–5.27, p = 0.003) and distance metastasis stage (HR: 3.00, 95% CI: 1.25–7.21, p = 0.014) were both independently associated with worse OS.

Conclusions: this observational study presents the largest multi-center cohort analysis of SNUC to date, providing new insights into prognostic factors for a rare cancer treated at global centers of excellence. Orbital involvement and the presence of metastases are candidate independent risk factors associated with poorer OS.

SNUC, sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma, survival outcomes
2072-6694
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UCL sinonasal group
Liu, Jacklyn
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Counsell, Nicholas
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Ferrari, Marco
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Vermi, William
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Lombardi, Davide
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Sessa, Fausto
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Liu, Jacklyn, Takahashi, Yoko and Rehman, Umar , UCL sinonasal group (2026) Outcomes for sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC): an international multi-center retrospective cohort study. Cancers, 18 (3), [366]. (doi:10.3390/cancers18030366).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) is an extremely rare, high-grade, and aggressive tumor of the sinonasal tract. Due to the rarity of this malignancy, current treatment guidelines are based on small and often/mainly single-center retrospective datasets. In the absence of a universally accepted standard of care for SNUC, treatment approaches vary across countries and institutions, reflecting real-world clinical practice. The primary aim of this study was to describe real-world treatment and outcomes for patients with confirmed SNUC. 

Methods: this was an international, multi-center, retrospective, observational cohort study that pooled patients into the largest SNUC dataset to date. Fifteen centers were enrolled to contribute data, including seven from Europe, four from the United States, three from the United Kingdom, and one from Canada. In the absence of a universally accepted standard of care for SNUC, treatment approaches varied across countries and institutions, reflecting real-world clinical practice. Patients included were those with histologically confirmed SNUC who were treated between 1997 and 2021. 

Results: this study yielded 485 patients treated for SNUC. The median age at diagnosis was 55.6 years (IQR: 44.5–67.6), and 63.7% were male. Most cases presented at advanced stages, with 70.8% as T4a or T4b. Overall survival (OS) outcomes were available for 412 patients, with a median follow-up of 26.0 months. The 5- and 10-year OS were 47.2% (95% CI: 40.8–53.3%) and 39.6% (95% CI: 32.5–46.6%), respectively. Advanced age, dichotomized T-stage (T4a/b vs. T1–3), M-stage, and orbital involvement were significant poor prognostic factors on univariable analysis (p’s < 0.01). On multivariable analysis, orbital involvement (HR: 2.73, 95% CI: 1.42–5.27, p = 0.003) and distance metastasis stage (HR: 3.00, 95% CI: 1.25–7.21, p = 0.014) were both independently associated with worse OS.

Conclusions: this observational study presents the largest multi-center cohort analysis of SNUC to date, providing new insights into prognostic factors for a rare cancer treated at global centers of excellence. Orbital involvement and the presence of metastases are candidate independent risk factors associated with poorer OS.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 January 2026
Published date: 24 January 2026
Keywords: SNUC, sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma, survival outcomes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509926
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509926
ISSN: 2072-6694
PURE UUID: e47cdc6c-3e21-411a-9403-b6ce2f809dc9
ORCID for Tim R. Fenton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4737-8233

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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2026 17:32
Last modified: 14 Mar 2026 03:16

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Contributors

Author: Jacklyn Liu
Author: Yoko Takahashi
Author: Umar Rehman
Author: Mario Turri-Zanoni
Author: Davide Mattavelli
Author: Nicholas Counsell
Author: Marco Ferrari
Author: Vittorio Rampinelli
Author: William Vermi
Author: Davide Lombardi
Author: Rami Saade
Author: Ki Wan Park
Author: Oscar Emanuel
Author: Volker H. Schartinger
Author: Alessandro Franchi
Author: Carla Facco
Author: Fausto Sessa
Author: Simonetta Battocchio
Author: Patrick Rene Gerhard Eriksen
Author: Simone Kloch Bendtsen
Author: Kathrine Kronberg Jakobsen
Author: Mohamed el Haddouchi
Author: Roberta Maragliano
Author: Giedrius Lelkaitis
Author: Anirudh Saraswathula
Author: Raman Preet Kaur
Author: Wojciech K. Mydlarz
Author: Murugappan Ramanathan
Author: Masaru Ishii
Author: Manas Dave
Author: Tim R. Fenton ORCID iD
Author: Alison Lim
Author: Saleh Okhovat
Author: Gyleen Elegio
Author: Charles Dupin
Author: Pierre Pouvreau
Author: Juliette Thariat
Author: Laurence Digue
Author: Francois-Regis Ferrand
Author: Valerie Costes-Martineau
Author: Claire Castain
Author: Héloïse De Kermadec
Author: Justin Hintze
Author: James Paul O’Neill
Author: Peter Lacy
Author: Francis M. Vaz
Author: Paul O’Flynn
Author: David J. Howard
Author: Paul Stimpson
Author: David Thomson
Corporate Author: UCL sinonasal group

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