Percutaneous Management of Recurrent Head and Neck Cancer: Current Role and Evolving Principles in the Multidisciplinary Setting.

Curr Oncol Rep

Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Basement 1, 11 Jalan Tan Tock Seng, Singapore, 308433, Singapore.

Published: March 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • This review discusses the role of percutaneous interventional radiology in managing recurrent head and neck cancers, highlighting its importance within a multidisciplinary team that includes surgery and radiation therapy.
  • It emphasizes the challenges in treating recurrent cancers, particularly focusing on preserving patient function and minimizing side effects from traditional treatments like surgery and chemotherapy.
  • The review suggests that percutaneous interventions offer a less invasive treatment alternative, filling a gap for patients who cannot tolerate more aggressive therapies and potentially providing palliative care for those with limited options.

Article Abstract

Purpose Of Review: In this review, we will outline the role of percutaneous interventional radiological management of recurrent head and neck (H&N) cancer in the context of a multidisciplinary setting which consists of surgery, radiation therapy, as well as established and evolving systemic therapies that may impact current practice.

Recent Findings: Management of recurrent H&N cancer is complex, with attention to the preservation of function and minimal treatment-related morbidity. The favored treatment modalities in local recurrence previously treated with radiotherapy are surgical resection, and if unresectable, for chemotherapy as definitive treatment, or as a prelude to resection if there is good tumor response. Unfortunately, some of these patients are too frail for major surgery or to withstand the toxicity of chemotherapy. There is a gap for effective local therapy without the morbidity of surgery, toxicity of re-irradiation, and systemic side effects of chemotherapy. Percutaneous interventions have the potential to bridge that gap as well as provide palliative symptomatic treatment for patients that have exhausted all treatment options. In the multidisciplinary setting involving the treatment of complex recurrent H&N cancer, percutaneous management now plays a viable and effective role with a foothold in this team-based approach.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11912-021-01045-7DOI Listing

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