Involvement of the cervical lymph nodes is the most important prognostic factor for patients with oral/ oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), and the decision whether to electively treat patients with clinically negative necks remains a controversial topic. Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) provides a minimally invasive method of determining the disease status of the cervical node basin, without the need for a formal neck dissection. This technique potentially improves the accuracy of histological nodal staging and avoids over-treating three-quarters of this patient population, minimizing associated morbidity. The technique has been validated for patients with OSCC, and larger-scale studies are in progress to determine its exact role in the management of this patient population. This article was designed to outline the current best practice guidelines for the provision of SNB in patients with early-stage OSCC, and to provide a framework for the currently evolving recommendations for its use. These guidelines were prepared by a multidisciplinary surgical/nuclear medicine/pathology expert panel under the joint auspices of the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM) Oncology Committee and the Sentinel European Node Trial Committee.
Several studies have shown that the thickness of tongue carcinoma is related to prognosis and to the likelihood of cervical node metastases. We investigated whether preoperative estimates of tumor thickness and volume, as determined from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), correlated with histologic thickness and might therefore predict the presence of neck metastases. We assessed relationships between histologic tumor thickness and MRI tumor thickness and volume in a retrospective series of 33 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue. Thicknesses were determined by direct measurement and by considering corrections for ulceration or tumor vegetation (reconstructed thickness). Relationships between MRI thickness and the presence or absence of homolateral and contralateral nodal metastases were also investigated. We found that MRI thicknesses correlated strongly and directly with histologic tumor thicknesses, although mean MRI thicknesses were significantly greater than histologic thicknesses. MRI thicknesses were significantly greater in patients with contralateral neck involvement than in those with no neck involvement. We conclude that MRI provides an accurate and reproducible means of estimating the thickness of tongue carcinomas, paving the way for further studies on more extensive series of patients to determine whether preoperatively determined MRI thickness can reliably predict homolateral and bilateral neck involvement.
TORS seems as safe and effective as TLM. Shorter TORS operating times are probably attributable to prior experience with TLM. For laryngeal exposure, length of tube placement and margin evaluability, TLM was superior; however, this may change as TORS develops and transoral robotic instruments are optimized.
Laser removal of early glottic cancer is oncologically adequate with margins greater than 1 mm from the tumor edge. Positive margins require further treatment; close margins may require further treatment depending on tumor characteristics.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.