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Head and Neck Cancer

Head and Neck Cancer

Head and Neck Cancer

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H&N Cancer Overview - Basics & Bad Habits

  • Predominantly Squamous Cell Carcinomas (SCC) >90% from upper aerodigestive tract (UADT) mucosa.
  • India: High incidence, often linked to regional habits like tobacco and betel quid chewing.
  • Key Risk Factors ("Bad Habits"):
    • Tobacco (smoking/smokeless): Primary etiological agent, dose-response relationship. 📌 Tobacco: Chief Culprit.
    • Alcohol: Synergistic effect with tobacco, significantly ↑ risk.
    • Betel Quid (Areca nut): Strong association with oral cancer; causes Oral Submucous Fibrosis (OSMF) - a precancerous condition.
    • Human Papillomavirus (HPV): Mainly HPV-16, linked to oropharyngeal cancers (tonsil, base of tongue); generally better prognosis.
    • Others: Poor oral hygiene, chronic irritation, radiation exposure, nutritional deficiencies (e.g., Plummer-Vinson syndrome).

⭐ Over 75% of head and neck cancers are linked to tobacco use (smoked or smokeless).

Head and Neck Cancer: Risk Factors, Sites, Genetics

Staging & Spread - Mapping the Mayhem

  • TNM System (AJCC 8th Ed. principles):

    • T (Tumor): Size & local invasion (T1-T4).
    • N (Nodes): Regional lymph node status (N0-N3).
      • N0: No nodes.
      • N1: Single ipsilateral, ≤ 3cm.
      • N2: Ipsilateral > 3cm-6cm / Multiple ipsi / Bilateral/Contralateral (all ≤ 6cm).
      • N3: Node > 6cm / Any node with Extranodal Extension (ENE).
    • M (Metastasis): M0 (no distant), M1 (distant).
  • Key Neck Nodal Levels:

    • I: Submental/Submandibular
    • II: Upper Jugular
    • III: Middle Jugular
    • IV: Lower Jugular
    • V: Posterior Triangle
    • VI: Anterior Compartment Neck lymph node levels diagram
  • Spread Patterns:

    • Lymphatic: Common, predictable.
    • Hematogenous: Lungs, liver, bone.

⭐ Extracapsular spread (ECS) or Extranodal Extension (ENE) in lymph nodes (pN+) significantly worsens prognosis and often indicates need for adjuvant chemoradiotherapy.

Clinical Clues & Diagnosis - Signs & Sleuthing

  • Key Symptoms (Red Flags):
    • Oral: Non-healing ulcer/patch (>3 wks), pain, bleeding, trismus, loose teeth.
    • Laryngeal: Persistent hoarseness (>3 wks), stridor, dysphagia, hemoptysis.
    • Pharyngeal: Sore throat, dysphagia, odynophagia, referred otalgia (Trotter's - NPC), globus.
    • Nasal/Sinus: Unilateral obstruction, epistaxis, facial swelling/pain, proptosis.
    • Neck: Persistent lump (often painless, firm, fixed, >2cm).
    • General: Unexplained weight loss, fatigue.
  • Diagnostic Approach:
> ⭐ Histopathological confirmation via biopsy is mandatory. FNAC is the primary step for suspicious neck nodes.
*   **Imaging:** CT (bone, nodes), MRI (soft tissue, perineural spread), PET-CT (mets, unknown primary).
![Lymph Node Groups of the Neck](https://ylbwdadhbcjolwylidja.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/notes/L1/Surgery_Head_and_Neck_Surgery_Head_and_Neck_Cancer/d21081df-f635-4b8e-923d-51b59f75a48d.jpg)

Management Modalities - Treatment Takedown

  • Goal: Maximize cure, preserve organ function & Quality of Life (QoL). Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) essential.
  • Core Modalities:
    • Surgery: Primary for most resectable tumors (oral cavity, larynx, salivary). Includes neck dissection (therapeutic/prophylactic). Reconstruction often needed (e.g., PMMC, free flaps).
    • Radiotherapy (RT): Definitive (e.g., early larynx, NPC), adjuvant (post-op), or palliative. Techniques: EBRT (IMRT, VMAT), Brachytherapy. Key toxicities: mucositis, xerostomia.
    • Chemotherapy (CT): Used as induction, concurrent with RT (CRT - a standard), adjuvant, or palliative. Agents: Cisplatin, 5-FU, Taxanes. Targeted therapy: Cetuximab (EGFR inhibitor).
    • Immunotherapy: PD-1 inhibitors (Nivolumab, Pembrolizumab) for recurrent/metastatic settings.
  • Treatment Choice: Depends on primary site, TNM stage, histology, patient's performance status, and comorbidities.

⭐ Concurrent chemoradiation (CRT) with high-dose Cisplatin (100 mg/m²) is a standard backbone for locally advanced SCCHN, offering improved locoregional control and survival over RT alone for many sites.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) is the most common head and neck cancer, strongly linked to tobacco and alcohol.
  • HPV infection, particularly HPV-16, is a key risk factor for oropharyngeal cancers.
  • Nasopharyngeal carcinoma is associated with EBV infection and often presents with neck nodes.
  • Leukoplakia and erythroplakia are critical oral premalignant lesions requiring biopsy.
  • Neck node metastasis is the single most important prognostic factor in H&N SCC.
  • FNAC is the initial investigation of choice for most palpable neck masses.
  • Early-stage disease often involves single-modality treatment; advanced stages typically require multimodality approaches.

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