Natural History of Treated and Untreated Hypopharyngeal Cancer

Patients with hypopharyngeal cancers frequently present at advanced stage and in poor general health status. Their natural history is characterised by diffuse local primary disease, mucosal and submucosal spread, early cervical nodal metastasis, and a relatively high rate of distant spread. By the t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advances in oto-rhino-laryngology 2019, Vol.83, p.27-34
Hauptverfasser: Eckel, Hans E., Bradley, Patrick J.
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description Patients with hypopharyngeal cancers frequently present at advanced stage and in poor general health status. Their natural history is characterised by diffuse local primary disease, mucosal and submucosal spread, early cervical nodal metastasis, and a relatively high rate of distant spread. By the time of initial diagnosis, some 60% of all hypopharyngeal cancer patients will be with stage IV disease, some 5% will present with distant metastases, and almost 40% will have a significant reduction in performance status. Less than 20% are diagnosed with a localised early stage disease. A long-standing social habit of excess of alcohol and tobacco usage leads to cancerisation and accounts for the multiple, synchronous primary malignant lesions that occur in many hypopharyngeal cancer patients. The natural history of untreated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma has infrequently been documented in the medical literature. However, without understanding the natural history of hypopharyngeal cancer, patient counselling and clinical management are difficult. Less than 20% of untreated patients survive for > 12 months and only a small proportion of patients will survive for more than 2 years after initial diagnosis. The natural course of the disease in patients treated for cure or, at least, for the relief of symptoms, is certainly more favourable than that of those who are not suited for, or not willing to accept the adverse effects of treatment. However, treatment results are still considerably less encouraging than those that are being reported for other sub-sites of the head and neck region. Among all head and neck cancer sites, 5-year age-standardised relative survival is currently the poorest for cancer of the hypopharynx and the highest for larynx cancers, 25 and 59%, respectively. Among the head and neck cancers, only hypopharynx showed a low outcome (25% at 5 years), with survival figures ranging between ≤30 (North Ireland and Italy) and 8% (Bulgaria). Recent studies from the United States indicate that overall 5-year survival rates for hypopharyngeal cancer have improved significantly in recent years, with the average survival being ≥40%.
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Their natural history is characterised by diffuse local primary disease, mucosal and submucosal spread, early cervical nodal metastasis, and a relatively high rate of distant spread. By the time of initial diagnosis, some 60% of all hypopharyngeal cancer patients will be with stage IV disease, some 5% will present with distant metastases, and almost 40% will have a significant reduction in performance status. Less than 20% are diagnosed with a localised early stage disease. A long-standing social habit of excess of alcohol and tobacco usage leads to cancerisation and accounts for the multiple, synchronous primary malignant lesions that occur in many hypopharyngeal cancer patients. The natural history of untreated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma has infrequently been documented in the medical literature. However, without understanding the natural history of hypopharyngeal cancer, patient counselling and clinical management are difficult. Less than 20% of untreated patients survive for &gt; 12 months and only a small proportion of patients will survive for more than 2 years after initial diagnosis. The natural course of the disease in patients treated for cure or, at least, for the relief of symptoms, is certainly more favourable than that of those who are not suited for, or not willing to accept the adverse effects of treatment. However, treatment results are still considerably less encouraging than those that are being reported for other sub-sites of the head and neck region. Among all head and neck cancer sites, 5-year age-standardised relative survival is currently the poorest for cancer of the hypopharynx and the highest for larynx cancers, 25 and 59%, respectively. Among the head and neck cancers, only hypopharynx showed a low outcome (25% at 5 years), with survival figures ranging between ≤30 (North Ireland and Italy) and 8% (Bulgaria). 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Less than 20% of untreated patients survive for &gt; 12 months and only a small proportion of patients will survive for more than 2 years after initial diagnosis. The natural course of the disease in patients treated for cure or, at least, for the relief of symptoms, is certainly more favourable than that of those who are not suited for, or not willing to accept the adverse effects of treatment. However, treatment results are still considerably less encouraging than those that are being reported for other sub-sites of the head and neck region. Among all head and neck cancer sites, 5-year age-standardised relative survival is currently the poorest for cancer of the hypopharynx and the highest for larynx cancers, 25 and 59%, respectively. Among the head and neck cancers, only hypopharynx showed a low outcome (25% at 5 years), with survival figures ranging between ≤30 (North Ireland and Italy) and 8% (Bulgaria). 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title Natural History of Treated and Untreated Hypopharyngeal Cancer
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