Principles of Chemotherapy and Chemoprevention
Rapid advances are being made in the treatment of advanced head and neck squamous cell cancers (SCCHN). Chemoradiation with cisplatin as the most established regimen is the standard of care for post-surgical patients with positive margins or extracapsular extension of tumor in lymph node. For definitive, non-surgical treatment, the addition of chemotherapy or the EGFR-monoclonal antibody cetuximab to radiotherapy has been shown to improve survival compared to radiation alone with high-dose cisplatin being the most established regimen. In nasopharynx cancer cisplatin and concurrent radiotherapy followed by cisplatin/5FU has been the standard treatment regimen, though in the metastatic setting of nasopharynx cancer platinum/gemcitabine has shown to be superior to platinum/5FU in terms of progression-free survival. The addition of cetuximab to platinum-based chemotherapy improves overall survival in first-line metastatic treatment of SCCHN. After first line therapy for metastatic disease, the immune checkpoint inhibitor (PD-1 antibody) nivolumab is approved based on an overall survival benefit compared to single agent docetaxel chemotherapy.
- Explain where the application of chemotherapy has been shown to provide a survival advantage and/or an alternative to conventional therapeutic approaches for patients with advanced squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck (SCCHN).
- List the principles of neoadjuvant or induction therapy, sequential and concurrent chemoradiotherapy.
- Describe the principles of organ preservation.
- Recognize the subsequent risk of developing additional UADT cancers following successful treatment of an initial tumor.
- Discuss the yearly and cumulative risk of second UADT cancers in patients with SCCHN.
- Explain the role and sequencing of chemotherapy with radiation and surgery.
- Review the role of immunotherapy in advanced SCCHN.