Head/neck Flashcards
Older patients with differentiated thyroid cancer
worse prognosis
- Concurrent chemotherapy regimens with primary chemoradiation (NCCN category 1) for head and neck
o Cisplatin
- Cisplatin is considered the recommended agent; cetuximab is considered an alternative for patients who are not candidates for cisplatin
- Consider KPS and comorbidities
o Carboplatin / 5-FU
o Cetuximab
- Superior outcomes with RT + Cetuximab vs RT alone
- Post-operative / Adjuvant chemoradiation in poor risk disease head and neck
o High risk features for locoregional recurrence -> add chemotherapy to post-op RT
- Positive margins (primary tumor)
- Extracapsular spread /Extranodal Extension (locoregional LNs)
- Induction chemotherapy in HN
o Acceptable per NCCN guidelines
o Despite high response rates and a decrease in the incidence of distant metastatic disease, an improvement in OS has not been demonstrated
o TPF (docetaxol, cisplatin, 5-FU)
- Systemic therapy for recurrent/metastatic disease in HN
o Platinum-agent (cisplatin or carboplatin), 5-FU, and cetuximab (EXTREME regimen): first-line regimen for fit patients
- Platinum + 5-FU + Cetuximab > Platinum + 5-FU (RR, PFS, and OS)
- Platinum + 5-FU = Platinum + Taxol; extrapolate and will substitute taxol for 5-FU
o Pembrolizumab and Nivolumab are approved for platinum-refractory R/M disease
nasopharynx cancer trtmt
Large Primary and/or +LNs: Stage III, IVA, IVB
* Chemoradiation (with cisplatin) +/- adjuvant chemotherapy (cisplatin +5-FU)
o Small primary and No LNs: Stage I-II
* Radiation alone
nasopharynx cancer trtmt met
o R/M Disease
* Cisplatin + Gemcitabine > Cisplatin + 5-FU
o Medullary Thyroid Cancer
- Vandetanib and Cabozantinib – multikinase TKIs, inhibit RET (PFS benefit)