Intro & Risks - Larynx Lowdown
- Laryngeal Cancer: Uncontrolled cell growth in larynx tissues, primarily affecting voice and breathing.
- India Epidemiology: Significant burden, ~2-3% of all cancers. Peak incidence 50-70 yrs; M:F ratio ~10:1.
- Major Risk Factors (synergistic effects common):
- Tobacco (smoking, smokeless) - strongest, dose-dependent.
- Alcohol (especially with tobacco).
- HPV (oncogenic types 16, 18).
- Chronic GERD.
- Occupational exposure (e.g., asbestos, nickel, wood dust, paint fumes).
- 📌 Mnemonic for key risks: "T.A.H.O.G." (Tobacco, Alcohol, HPV, Occupational, GERD).

⭐ Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the most common histological type (>90%).
Anatomy & Staging - Voice Box Map

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Laryngeal Subsites & Lymphatics:
- Supraglottis: Epiglottis to ventricle. Rich lymphatics (Levels II-IV, bi.).
- Glottis: True cords, commissures. Sparse lymphatics.
⭐ Glottic cancer: early hoarseness, better prognosis (sparse lymphatics).
- Subglottis: Below glottis to cricoid. Paratracheal, pretracheal, Level IV, mediastinal.
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T-Stage Highlights (AJCC 8th):
Site T1 T2 T3 T4a Supra 1 subsite, NM >1 subsite/region, no fix CF / PES/PGS/thyroid inner inv. Thru thyroid / beyond larynx Glot VC(s), NM Extends supra/sub / IM CF / PGS/thyroid inner inv. Thru thyroid / beyond larynx Sub Limited to subglot Extends to VC(s) CF Invades cricoid/thyroid / beyond larynx (T4b: Prevertebral, carotid, mediastinum) -
Common Metastasis: Lungs, liver, bones.
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📌 SGS for subsites: Supraglottis, Glottis, Subglottis.
Signs & Diagnosis - Symptom Sleuth
- Symptoms by Laryngeal Subsite:
- Glottis: Persistent hoarseness (earliest symptom), dyspnea, stridor (late).
- Supraglottis: Dysphagia, odynophagia, referred otalgia (CN IX, X - Trotter's sign), muffled "hot potato" voice, globus sensation, neck mass. Often asymptomatic initially.
- Subglottis: Biphasic stridor, dyspnea, cough. Symptoms often late.
- Diagnostic Workup:
- History & Clinical Examination: Assess risk factors (smoking, alcohol).
- Laryngeal Visualization:
- Indirect Laryngoscopy (IDL) or Flexible Nasopharyngolaryngoscopy (NPL) for initial assessment.
- Definitive Diagnosis:
- Direct Laryngoscopy (DL) under GA + Biopsy (gold standard).
- Staging:
- CECT Neck & Chest: Assesses primary tumor (T), nodes (N), distant metastasis (M).
- MRI: For soft tissue delineation, cartilage invasion, perineural spread.
- PET-CT: For distant mets, synchronous primary, or suspected recurrence.
⭐ Any patient with hoarseness persisting for more than 3 weeks requires laryngoscopic examination to rule out malignancy.

Management & Prognosis - Treatment Tactics
- Treatment Modalities:
- Surgery:
- Conservation Laryngeal Surgery (CLS): Cordectomy, Transoral Laser Microsurgery (TLS), Partial Laryngectomy.
- Total Laryngectomy (TL).
- Radiotherapy (RT): Definitive, Adjuvant, Palliative. Techniques: IMRT, VMAT.
- Chemotherapy:
- Induction (neoadjuvant).
- Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy (CCRT): Cisplatin (100 mg/m²) standard.
- Immunotherapy: Pembrolizumab (PD-1 inh.) for recurrent/metastatic disease.
- Surgery:
- Stage-wise Treatment:
- Early (T1/T2, N0): Single modality.
- RT (preferred for T1a glottis).
- CLS (TLS for T1/selected T2).
- Locally Adv. (T3/T4a, N+ resectable):
⭐ Concurrent chemoradiation (CCRT) is the standard of care for organ preservation in locally advanced resectable laryngeal cancer.
- CCRT (organ preservation strategy).
- TL + neck dissection, then Adjuvant RT/CCRT if high-risk features.
- Early (T1/T2, N0): Single modality.
- Voice Rehabilitation (Post-TL): Tracheoesophageal Puncture (TEP), Electrolarynx, Esophageal speech.
- Key Prognostic Factors: Stage (TNM), Tumor site (glottic best), Nodal status, Surgical margins, General health.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
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