Larynx Flashcards

1
Q

How is T1 staged in larengeal cancer?

A
  • T1a = one cord (glottis)
  • T1b = 2 cords (glottis)
  • T1 - one subsite (suprglottis)
  • Limited to subglottis
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2
Q

How is T2 staged in larengeal cancer?

A
  • Extends to supra/sub or impaired mobility (glottis)
  • One subsite/extends to glottis/ mobile (Supraglottis)
  • Extends to cords/mobile (subglottis)
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3
Q

How is T3 staged in larengeal cancer?

A
  • Cord fixation
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4
Q

How is T4 staged in larengeal cancer?

A
  • extends beyond the larynx
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5
Q

How is early disease managed?

A
  • Choice
  • Transoral laser microsurgery (T1a)
  • OR Radiotherapy (T1b-T2)
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6
Q

How is advanced disease managed?

A
  • RT with concomittant chemoor surgery with adj RT

- T4a - consider surgery and adjuvant RT =/- concurrent chemo

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7
Q

How are early larengeal cancers treated?

A
  • T1-T2a
  • Low tumour volume
  • RT with surgery in reserve or TLM
  • Survival between two is similar, but no trials to compare
  • 2.25Gy / #
  • No concurrent chemo, no prophylactic neck RT
  • larger tumours with further infiltration, RT may be easier
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8
Q

How are T2b-T3 tumours treated (glottis)?

A
  • Surgery in selected cases
  • Mostly RT with larrynx preservation
  • Concurrent chemo is gold standard
  • Elective treatment to nodal areas II, III and IV
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9
Q

How are early supraglottic tumours treated?

A
  • RT or conservation surgery
  • No concurrent chemo unless the patient is node +ve
  • prophylactic bilateral neck node XRT, levels II and III
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10
Q

How is locally advanced larangeal cancer managed?

A
  • Total laryngectomy +/- RT
  • Organ preservation where possible
  • Concurrent chemoRT is standard
  • Node neg = prophylactic nodal treatment to II-IV
  • node pos = chemoRT or RT modified to include
  • Could follow RT with neck disection for nodal removal
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11
Q

What is the NIMRAD trial?

A
  • Nimorazole with RT vs RT alone
  • Nimorazole potential to sensitise hypoxic cells to cytotoxic effects of ionising RT
  • See how well it is tolerated
  • Is it an alternative to chemo?
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12
Q

What are the palliative treatment options?

A
  • Tracheostomy
  • May be followed by more radical treatment
  • chemoRT does provide control for T4 tumours but must be careful with patient selection
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13
Q

How is cetuxamab used?

A
  • where chemo is contraindicated
  • can be used in ChemoRT (recurrent)
  • weekly 7 weeks
  • Monoclonal antibody
  • Cost effectiveness, NICE
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14
Q

What are RT fractrionations for N0 glottic carcinoma?

A
  • 63Gy / 28# / 5.5 weeks (Grade B)
  • 50Gy / 16# / 3 weeks (T1 disease only) (Grade C)
  • 55Gy / 20# / 4 weeks (Grade C)
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15
Q

What are RT fractions for non-glottic larynx cancer (stage I/II)?

A
  • 70Gy / 35# / 7 weeks (Grade C)
  • 65-66Gy / 30# / 6 weeks (Grade C)
  • 66Gy / 33# OR 70Gy / 35#, 6 fractions per week over 6 weeks (Grade B)
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