1985
DOI: 10.5981/jjhnc1974.12.40
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Technical Problems Inherent to Intraarterial Chemotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer

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“…The object of intraarterial (IA) drug administration is to deliver drugs to the tumor site and achieve higher local concentrations without systemic side effects (38). Patients with advanced head and neck cancer are most appropriate targets because their blood supply is readily accessible by current surgical techniques and tumor response is easily assessed (14). Briefly, by surgical procedure, a catheter is inserted and placed through the superficial temporal artery along the external carotid artery up to the tumor-supplying vessel (17).…”
Section: Clinical Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The object of intraarterial (IA) drug administration is to deliver drugs to the tumor site and achieve higher local concentrations without systemic side effects (38). Patients with advanced head and neck cancer are most appropriate targets because their blood supply is readily accessible by current surgical techniques and tumor response is easily assessed (14). Briefly, by surgical procedure, a catheter is inserted and placed through the superficial temporal artery along the external carotid artery up to the tumor-supplying vessel (17).…”
Section: Clinical Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%