Intro & Risks - Sinus Danger Signs
- Definition: Malignant neoplasms arising from the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses.
- Common Sites (in decreasing order): Maxillary sinus > Nasal cavity > Ethmoid sinuses > Sphenoid/Frontal sinuses.
- Epidemiology: Predominantly affects older males (typically 50-70 years). Indian epidemiology highlights links to tobacco and specific occupational exposures.
- Key Risk Factors:
- Occupational: Wood dust (adenocarcinoma), nickel, chromium, leather dust. 📌 Mnemonic: "Workers Near Chemicals & Lumber"
- Smoking: Strong association, particularly for Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC).
- Viral Infections: HPV (implicated in some Sinonasal Papillomas with malignant transformation and some SCCs), EBV (associated with NK/T-cell lymphoma).

⭐ Maxillary sinus is the most common site for sinonasal malignancies.
Tumor Types & Spread - The Nasty Neighbors
| Type | Key Features |
|---|---|
| SCC | Most common |
| Adenocarcinoma | Intestinal (wood dust) / Non-intestinal |
| Adenoid Cystic Ca | Perineural spread (painful) |
| Esthesioneuroblastoma | Olfactory epithelium origin, Hyams grading |
| SNUC | Sinonasal Undifferentiated Ca; very aggressive |
| Melanoma | Mucosal; poor prognosis |
| Lymphoma | NK/T-cell type common (midline destructive) |
| Sarcomas | Various types (e.g., rhabdomyosarcoma) |
- Local Invasion: Orbit, skull base, pterygopalatine fossa.
- Lymphatic Spread: Neck nodes; often late (except high-grade tumors).
- Hematogenous Spread: Rare.

⭐ Esthesioneuroblastoma (Olfactory Neuroblastoma) arises from the olfactory epithelium in the superior nasal cavity and is graded by Hyams system.
Clinical Features & Diagnosis - Spotting the Suspects
- Presentation often late; unilateral symptoms are key red flags.
- Nasal: Obstruction, epistaxis, rhinorrhea, anosmia.
- Facial: Pain, swelling, paresthesia (CN V2 common).
- Ocular: Proptosis, diplopia, epiphora, visual loss (orbital invasion).
- Oral: Dental pain, loose teeth, palatal bulge.
- ⚠️ Red Flags: Persistent unilateral symptoms, cranial neuropathies (e.g., CN V2), orbital signs.
- Diagnostic Workup:
- Nasal endoscopy + Biopsy: CRUCIAL for diagnosis.
- Imaging:
- CECT: Details bone erosion, tumor extent.
- MRI: Assesses soft tissue, perineural spread, intracranial extension.
- PET-CT: For staging & detecting metastases.
⭐ Ohngren's line (medial canthus to angle of mandible) divides maxillary sinus tumors: anteroinferior (better prognosis) vs. posterosuperior (worse prognosis). 📌

Staging & Management - The Battle Plan
- Staging: AJCC TNM (8th Ed.). General principles; site-specific considerations vital.
- Treatment Principles: Multimodal therapy standard; MDT approach crucial.
- Surgery: Primary for most resectable tumors (Endoscopic vs. Open). Goal: R0 resection.
- Radiotherapy (RT): Adjuvant (e.g., positive margins, PNI), Definitive (unresectable), Palliative. IMRT preferred.
- Chemotherapy (CT): Induction, Concurrent (e.g., Cisplatin with RT), Palliative. Role in specific histologies.
⭐ Perineural invasion (PNI) is a significant adverse prognostic factor in sinonasal malignancies, often necessitating adjuvant radiotherapy.
- Key Prognostic Factors: Stage, histology, grade, PNI, surgical margins, orbital/intracranial extension.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Maxillary sinus is the most common site for sinonasal malignancies.
- Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) is the most frequent histological type.
- Wood dust exposure is a key risk for ethmoid adenocarcinoma.
- Inverted papilloma carries risk of malignant transformation to SCC.
- Esthesioneuroblastoma arises from olfactory epithelium; uses Kadish staging.
- Ohngren's line divides maxillary tumors, impacting prognosis.
- Nickel exposure is a risk for nasal cavity SCC and ethmoid SCC.
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