S11) Head and Neck Cancers Flashcards

1
Q

What are head & neck cancers?

A

HNC are a broad category of different tumour types which affect the upper aerodigestive structures, anywhere within the oral cavity, nose, nasal cavity and sinuses, pharynx and larynx

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2
Q

HNC are relatively uncommon compared to other types of cancers.

What type of malignancy is observed?

A

Squamous cell carcinomas (>90% cases) are the predominant form as most HNC begin in the squamous mucosal surfaces lining these structures

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3
Q

Where in the head and neck do HNC commonly occur?

A
  • Most common: oral cavity, larynx and oropharynx
  • Less comon: nasopharynx and laryngopharynx
  • Rare: salivary glands, nasal cavity and sinuses
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4
Q

Identify 6 risk factors for HNC

A
  • Alcohol use
  • Tobacco use (incl chewing tobacco)
  • Age (common in ~60- 70 year olds)
  • Gender (affects more men)
  • EBV infection (esp nasopharyngeal cancers)
  • Betal nut chewing (aka Paan – popular in Leicester & Asia)
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5
Q

Why have HNC incidence been on the rise in younger patients despite a recent decline in smoking?

A

In more recent years HPV-related HNC has been identified, particularly causing oropharyngeal cancers in younger patients

know that HPV is the virus that can effect top and bottom

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6
Q

Clinical manifestations of HNCs vary greatly, depending on the location of the cancer, the structure(s) involved and the extent of cancer spread.

However, what are some common clinical presentations?

A
  • Unexplained painful mucosal ulceration/lesion e.g. leukoplakia, erythroplakia, lump in oral cavity
  • Unexplained hoarseness of voice
  • Dysphagia / odynophagia (pain)
  • Otalgia (pharynx or larynx cancers)
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7
Q

Why do HNCs commonly present with a neck lump?

A
  • HNC readily spread to lymph nodes, due to the rich vascular supply and lymphatic drainage of the region
  • Hence, cervical lymphadenopathy due to cervical lymph node metastases is another common initial presenting sign
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8
Q

Which investigations are involved in the clinical diagnosis and staging of the HNC?

A
  • Clinical examination
  • Biopsy of the lesion/neck lump
  • Imaging e.g. CT/MRI
  • -* Endoscopic investigation (HNC in nasal cavity, pharynx, larynx)
  • PET scan to identify where the tumour started
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9
Q

Why is imaging involved in the clinical diagnosis of HNC?

A

Imaging evaluates the extent of the primary cancer as well as involvement of other structures and lymph nodes

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10
Q

Why is endoscopy involved in the clinical diagnosis of HNC?

A

Endoscopy allows for direct visualisation of the cancer and enables biopsy

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11
Q

When is a biopsy involved in the clinical diagnosis of HNC?

A

Biopsy (fine needle aspiration for cytology or a core biopsy) can be performed under ultrasound guidance if a neck lump is present

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12
Q

What are the clinical benefits of staging HNCs?

A
  • Determines the severity of the HNC
  • Determines the appropriate treatment for the patient
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13
Q

What is the TMN staging system?

A
  • The TMN system is a staging system based on the tumour size and/or location, the degree of lymph node involvement and the presence or absence of distant metastases
  • Patients can be classified as having Stage I to Stage IV
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14
Q

Identify some members of the multidisciplinary team tackling HNC

A
  • Radiologists
  • Pathologists
  • Specialist head and neck cancer surgeons
  • Oncologists
  • Dieticians
  • Speech and language therapists
  • Plastic surgeons
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15
Q

What is the most common type of thyroid cancer?

A

Papillary adenocarcinoma

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16
Q

tumour subtypes

A
  • lip/oral cavity
  • pharynx: oropharynx, nasopharynx
  • larynx: supra glottis, glottis and subglottis
  • thread
17
Q

what are specific risk factors for thyroid cancer specifically

A
  • irradiation exposire
  • family history
18
Q

general outline of management

A
  • Medical → oncology or surgery
  • supportive
19
Q

what does oncology treatment involve

A
  • chemo and radiotherapy
  • mainly for small tumours
20
Q

what does surgical intervention include

A

assess tumour

sample

remove

reconstruct (mainly with tissue from arm or leg)

  • mainly for larger tumours that don’t respond to med
21
Q

what are some common presentations with people suffering from cancer in pharynx

A
  • lump
  • pain
  • dysphagia
  • odynophagia
  • weight loss

it can be very hard to access these tumours so can perform a robotic surgery to fix

22
Q

presentation of cancer of the larynx

A
  • dyphonia
  • dysphagia
  • referred otalgia
  • glogus
  • neck lump
  • weight loss
  • cacexia (loss of fat)
23
Q

what is a laryngectomy

A
  • cut across the windpipe and attach to the skin
  • removal of some or all of the larynx
  • can still speak
24
Q

what is a tracheostomy

A
  • insertion of a pipe in neck to help breathe
25
Q

where is the thyroid found

A

midline between the thyroid cartilage

26
Q

how can the thyroid cartilage present

A
  • lump
  • compressive symptoms (hard to swallow feel like being strangled)
  • voice change
27
Q

what are the different types of thyroid cancer

A
  • papillary adenoCa → remove half thyroid = good prognosis
  • follicular adenoCa → take out all thyroid
  • medullary Ca → genetic
  • anaplastic → big = low prognosis
28
Q

treatments of thyroid cancer

A
  • thyroidectomy
  • radioactive iodine to shrink it
  • radiotherapy
29
Q

blood supply of thyroid

A
30
Q

anatomy of the recurrent laryngeal nerve

A
31
Q

what are the three parts that make up the larynx

A
32
Q

lip/oral cavity cancer presentation

A
  • lump
  • pain
  • fixation of tongue
  • problems swallowing
  • pain swallowing
33
Q

pharynx cancer presentation

A
  • lump
  • pain
  • problems swallowing
  • pain on swallowing
  • weight loss
34
Q

treatment of pharynx cancer

A
  • small: excise and repair defect
  • radiotherapy
  • larger tumour: extensive surgery
35
Q

larynx cancer presentation

A
  • dyphonia (voice change)
  • dysphagia
  • referred otalgia
  • glogus- feeling of having a lump in your throat
  • neck lump
  • cacexia
36
Q

thyroid cancer presentation

A
  • present with a lump
  • compressive symptoms like swallowing feel like being strangle
37
Q

what are some investigations for thyroid cancer

A
  • imaging (US)
  • needle test for strange lumps
  • aspiration cytology