AI Article Synopsis

  • The unknown primary carcinoma in the head and neck accounts for about 7% of all head and neck cancers, prompting the use of multiple diagnostic tools like fiberoptic endoscopy, CT/MRI, and more recently, PET scans to locate missing tumors.
  • A study involving 31 patients with confirmed squamous cell carcinoma implemented a diagnostic protocol that included comprehensive examinations and imaging; if initial tests were inconclusive, Whole Body PET and staging endoscopy were used to find undetected tumors.
  • The PET scans identified 9 hidden primary tumors (29% detection rate), while the combined results of PET and panendoscopy found 45.2% of unknown tumors; 17 patients showed no primary tumor and were treated with neck dissection

Article Abstract

Background: The unknown primary carcinoma in the head and neck has been estimated to represent up to 7% of all head and neck carcinomas. In an attempt to identify the occult primary tumor the evaluation of this patient population has included a complete head and neck examination, flexible fiberoptic endoscopy, and imaging with CT/MRI. More recently, positron emission tomography (PET) has been advocated as a tool to detect primary tumors.

Methods: A cohort of 31 patients with fine-needle aspiration biopsy-confirmed squamous cell carcinoma were prospectively entered into a diagnostic protocol to identify the occult primary tumor. The diagnostic protocol included a comprehensive head and neck examination (including flexible endoscopy) and CT and/or MRI. If the initial diagnostic evaluation failed to identify a primary tumor, the patients then underwent whole body PET imaging followed by staging endoscopy with biopsy of the at-risk occult tumor sites. The outcome measures included the accuracy of the PET to predict the presence of occult tumor at staging endoscopy and the accuracy of the negative PET and negative panendoscopy in predicting the subsequent development of a primary tumor in the upper aerodigestive tract during follow-up.

Results: The PET detected 9 occult primary tumors in the 31 patients (detection rate, 29%). Five occult primary tumors (2 base of tongue and 3 palatine tonsil) were detected during panendoscopy despite a negative PET. The combination of PET and panendoscopy detected 45.2% of the unknown primary tumors. Seventeen patients (N1, n = 7; N2a, n = 4; N2b, n = 2; N3, n = 4) had no primary tumor detected and were treated as an unknown primary carcinoma with primary neck dissection +/- radiation therapy +/- chemotherapy. In this series of 17 patients, there were 3 neck recurrences (17.6%). In addition, only 1 patient (5.8%) developed a primary tumor of the upper aerodigestive tract with a mean follow-up of 31.1 months (range, 21-60 months).

Conclusion: A negative PET study in patients with an occult primary head and neck carcinoma does not preclude the need for panendoscopy with biopsy to detect the occult primary tumor. The risk of subsequent primary tumor appears to be low in the patients with a negative PET and a negative panendoscopy (<6%).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hed.20654DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

primary tumor
32
occult primary
24
negative pet
20
head neck
20
primary
17
unknown primary
16
primary carcinoma
12
negative panendoscopy
12
primary tumors
12
pet
10

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!