Sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Overview
Sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma, abbreviated SNUC, is a rare aggressive type of cancer that arises from epithelium of the nose or sinuses.
Diagnosis
Sinonasal Undifferentiated Carcinoma (SNUC) is a rare and aggressive type of cancer originating in the epithelial layer of the nasal cavity or paranasal sinuses. It was first diagnosed in 1987. The aggressive nature of the cancer coupled with the advanced stage of disease upon presentation lead to a poor survival rate. Although the molecular nature of the mutation that causes SNUC is still poorly understood clinical treatment has shown that multimodality treatment has been the most successful option.
Symptoms
In most cases, symptoms present themselves at an advanced stage of disease. They can include but are not limited to: -Epistaxis -Nasal obstruction -Proptosis -Vision changes -Headache
Pathology
The etiology is still unknown to date, however, Gelbard et al. studied 12 oncogenes or known tumor suppressor gene “hotspots” where mutations in these regions are known to cause other types of neurocarcinomas. They also studied Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located in Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in order to find sites for finely targeted therapeutics.
Spectroscopy-based research done in this study identified 95 common mutations within the 12 hotspots. Of the 95 SNPs none presented a genotype that was an activating mutation
Treatment
All published findings on SNUC suggest that multimodaility treatment give the affected the best possible chance for survival. Varying combinations of and length between surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy have been tested. Findings from Mendenhall et al. have suggest that surgery plus radiotherapy and concominant chemotherapy is most efficient rather than radiotherapy combined with induced or maintenance chemotherapy.
Prognosis
In a Meta-analysis study to conglomerate findings regarding 28 published papers including 158 patients presenting SNUC following up with patients for an average of 14 months showed that at the time of last follow up 25% of patients were alive with no evidence of the disease, 22.4% were alive with presence of the disease, and 52.6% were deceased due to the disease.
See also
References
External links
- NACR - a 501(c) California Foundation providing resources and financing to fund a SNUC medical database.
- John Howland Fund - an organization that provides information about SNUC
- SinusTumor.org - an educational site that provides information about sinus tumors