Most Viewed Abstracts
1. Report Shows Shift in Starting Salaries for Physicians 2. 2008 Exclusive Survey—Earnings: Good news for primary care income 3. Medicare pay-for-reporting effort draws fire from frustrated doctors 4. Debunking Myths in the US Healthcare System 5. Appropriate Antibiotic Use for Acute Otitis Media
Your Article Summary
Radiochemotherapy in locally advanced squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck
Clinical Oncology, 06/25/09
Matzinger O et al. - In a review of radiochemotherapy in locally advanced squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck (SCCHN), this overview reviews the most relevant published studies on the multidisciplinary management of SCCHN and discusses future strategies to reduce locoregional failures.
Methods- SCCHN is a common disease that develops in the upper aerodigestive epithelium.
- Most important risk factors are tobacco and alcohol consumption.
- There is increasing evidence that human papillomavirus plays an important role in the cause of SCCHN.
- The complex anatomy, the vital functions of the upper aerodigestive tract, and close proximity to vital structures, explain that the goal of treatment is not only to improve survival outcomes, but also to preserve organ function.
- Radiotherapy and surgery are standard modalities of treatment, reflecting the locoregional predominance of SCCHN.
- Chemotherapy plays an important role in treatment of pts with locoregionally advanced disease, in conjunction with radiotherapy and surgery.
- Standard therapy for resectable locoregionally advanced (stage III or IV) SCCHN cancers consists either of surgery and adjuvant chemoradiotherapy or definitive concomitant chemoradiotherapy, depending upon disease site, stage and resectability of the tumour, or institutional experience.
- Concomitant chemoradiotherapy has been shown in several randomised trials to improve disease-free (DFS) and overall survival (OS) in the postoperative setting for resected disease with poor prognostic factors.
- Multiple randomised studies and meta-analyses have shown that definitive chemoradiotherapy, as well anti-epidermal growth factor receptor treatment in 1 randomised study, improved DFS and OS when compared with radiotherapy alone.
Today in Head and Neck...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Consensus Statement on the Terminology and Classification of Central Neck Dissection for Thyroid Cancer
Thyroid, 11/02/09
Nuclear factor-kappa B pathway and response in a phase II trial of bortezomib and docetaxel in patients with recurrent and/or metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
Annals of Oncology, 10/30/09
Diagnostic Pediatric Computed Tomographic Scans of the Head: Actual Dosage versus Estimated Risk
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 10/12/09
Article Search
Sponsor


See Latest Articles


