Hypopharyngeal cancer medical therapy
Hypopharyngeal cancer Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
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Treatment |
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Hypopharyngeal cancer medical therapy On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Hypopharyngeal cancer medical therapy |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Hypopharyngeal cancer medical therapy |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Faizan Sheraz, M.D. [2]
Overview
Medical Therapy
Treatment according to Stages:[1]
Stage | Treatment |
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Stage 1 |
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Stage 2 |
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Stage 3 |
If all or part of the hypopharynx is removed, the patient may need reconstructive surgery |
Stage 4 |
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Supportive Treatment
Many patients also need swallowing therapy after treatment to help them adjust to the changes in the structure of the throat.
Radiation Therapy
- As a single-modality treatment in early lesions. This was traditionally the case with small tumours of the true vocal fold. The disadvantage is a 5-week course of therapy. *Laser surgery is tending to replace radiotherapy for these lesions as the outcomes are similar and the treatment involves only a 1 or 2 days hospital stay.
- In certain advanced hypopharyngeal and laryngeal cancer, where combined radiotherapy and chemotherapy offers organ preservation and good locoregional control without surgery.
- For palliation for recurrent disease or advanced disease not suitable for surgery or organ preservation through chemoradiotherapy.
- Radiation is delivered by external beam in dedicated radiotherapy units.
- Radiation affects both normal tissue and cancer tissue, and the salivary glands and oral mucosa are particularly affected.
- Dryness is a common post-radiotherapy complaint.
- The mandible is commonly devascularised following radiotherapy and very prone to osteomyelitis and necrosis, secondary to dental sepsis.
References
- ↑ Treatment of hypopharyngeal cancer according to stages. http://www.cancer.gov/types/head-and-neck/patient/hypopharyngeal-treatment-pdq#section/_72