| Literature DB >> 33244460 |
Francisco J Civantos1, Jan B Vermorken2, Jatin P Shah3, Alessandra Rinaldo4, Carlos Suárez5, Luiz P Kowalski6,7, Juan P Rodrigo8, Kerry Olsen9, Primoz Strojan10, Antti A Mäkitie11, Robert P Takes12, Remco de Bree13, June Corry14, Vinidh Paleri15, Ashok R Shaha3, Dana M Hartl16, William Mendenhall17, Cesare Piazza18, Michael Hinni19, K Thomas Robbins20, Ng Wai Tong21, Alvaro Sanabria22, Andres Coca-Pelaz8, Johannes A Langendijk23, Juan Hernandez-Prera24, Alfio Ferlito25.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with metastases in the lymph nodes of the neck and no obvious primary tumor, neck cancer with unknown primary (NCUP), represent a management challenge. A majority of patients have metastatic squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), although other histologies do occur.Entities:
Keywords: HPV related head and neck cancer; cervical adenopathy with unknown primary; imaging head and neck cancer; molecular diagnoses occult primary; non-HPV related head and neck cancer; transoral laser microlaryngoscopy (TLM); transoral robotic surgery (TORS); upper aerodigestive tract cancers
Year: 2020 PMID: 33244460 PMCID: PMC7685177 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.593164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Evaluation of the adult patient presenting with pathological cervical adenopathy. H&N, Head and Neck; NBI, Narrow Band Imaging; CT, Computed Tomography; MRI, Magnetic Resonance Imaging; FNA, Fine Needle Aspiration; HPV, Human Papilloma Virus; IHC, Immunohistochemistry; PET-CT, Positron Emission Tomography-Computed Tomography.
Figure 273-year-old man with an human papilloma virus (HPV) 16 positive squamous cell carcinoma from an unknown primary site with bilateral positive level 2 lymph nodes. The patient was treated with deintensified intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) to 60 Gy in 30 once daily fractions to the oropharynx and bilateral positive nodes and 54 Gy in 30 fractions to the retropharyngeal nodes on the side with bulkier neck disease and levels 3 and 4 bilaterally. Concomitant weekly cisplatin 30 mg/M2 was administered. The patient tolerated treatment well and has remained disease free for 4.5 years without complications.