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Head & Neck
• Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage
• Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer
• Role Of HPV And EBV Virus
• Pathology & Prognostic Factors
Presenter : Dr. Varshu Goel
First Year Post-Graduate Resident
Department of Radiotherapy
Maulana Azad Medical College, Delhi
• Global incidence - exceeds half a million cases with around
300,000 deaths each year
(Chaturvedi et al, J Clin Oncol. 2013)
• In India – most common cancer in males and the fifth most
common in females
(International Agency for Research on Cancer GLOBOCAN, 2012)
• 90% of all head and neck cancers are squamous cell
carcinomas (HNSCC)
(Global Cancer Statistics, CA Cancer J Clin. 2011)
2
Introduction
Head & Neck
• Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage
• Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer
• Role Of HPV And EBV Virus
• Pathology & Prognostic Factors
Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
5
NasalCavity
• Includes Septum, Floor, Lateral Wall & Vestibule
• The normal lining of the nasal cavity is pseudostratified
columnar ciliated epithelium except for the vestibule, that
comprises squamous epithelium with sweat and sebaceous
glands.
• Boundaries :
• Superior - cribriform plate of the ethmoidal bone with
olfactory apparatus
• Inferior - hard palate
• Anterior - nasal bones and cartilage that form the external
nose
• Posterior - posterior border of the hard palate and maxillary
sinus
• Lateral - formed from the medial walls of the maxillary sinus
inferiorly and the ethmoid sinus superiorly; three turbinates
6
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
The Medial Wall Of The Nasal Cavity (Nasal Septum)
7
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
The Lateral Wall Of The Nasal Cavity
8
ParanasalSinuses
a) Maxillary sinuses - Largest, 15
ml volume
b) Ethmoidal Sinuses - Anterior,
Middle & Posterior group
c) Frontal Sinuses
d) Sphenoidal Sinus
• Sinuses are lined with
pseudostratified ciliated
columnar epithelium
• The purpose of the paranasal
sinuses is to lighten the bone
and give resonance to the voice
A. The position of the paranasal sinuses
in relation to the face.
B. Coronal section through the nasal
cavity showing the ethmoidal and the
maxillary sinuses Snell’s Clinical Anatomy by Regions, 9th ed.
The Lateral Wall Of The Nasal Cavity
Bulla Ethmoidalis
10
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
The Medial Wall Of The Nasal Cavity (Nasal Septum)
11
Gray’s Anatomy, 41st ed.
Lymphaticsof the NasalCavity
The lymphatic drainage of the nasal
cavity can be divided into two.
1. The main part of the nasal
cavity drains via the
nasopharynx to the
retropharyngeal nodes and
upper deep cervical nodes
(levels IIA and IIB).
2. The lower anterior portion
drains to the submandibular
(level IB), parotid (preauricular)
and jugulodigastric (level IIA)
nodes.
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
• Lymphatic drainage is typically
towards the retropharyngeal
(Rouviere’s node) and upper
deep cervical nodes (level II)
unless the tumour is
particularly anteriorly placed
when the buccinator, level I
and IIA nodes are at risk.
• The lymph system is
remarkably sparse and, as
such, tumours can be quite
advanced without involved
nodes.
12
Lymphaticsof the ParanasalSinuses
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
• Squamous cell carcinoma – originating from the mucosal
epithelium and includes a keratinizing and a non-keratinizing
type
• Lymphoepithelioma - poorly differentiated squamous cell
carcinoma or histologically undifferentiated carcinoma
accompanied by a prominent reactive lymphoplasmacytic
infiltrate; EBV associated
• Sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma - aggressive and
distinctive carcinoma of uncertain histogenesis that typically
presents with locally extensive disease; composed of
pleomorphic tumour cells with frequent necrosis
• Adenocarcinoma - glandular malignancies of the sinonasal
tract, excluding defined types of salivary gland carcinoma 13
WHOhistologicalclassificationof Nasal
Cavityand ParanasalSinuses
WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
• Salivary gland-type carcinomas
• Neuroendocrine tumours (carcinoids)
• Benign epithelial tumours
• Sinonasal papillomas
• Salivary gland-type adenomas
• Soft tissue tumours
• Haematolymphoid tumours
• Neuroectodermal tumors (pNETs)
• Tumours of bone and cartilage
• Secondary tumours
14
WHOhistologicalclassificationof Nasal
Cavityand ParanasalSinuses
WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
• 12 cm from base of
skull to C6 vertebrae
Naso-pharynx –C1 &
C2 vertebra
Oro-pharynx - C2 &
C3 vertebrae
Hypo-pharynx - C4, C5
& C6 Vertebra
15
Pharynx
Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
Nasopharynx
16
• Begins at the posterior
choana and extends along
the plane of the airway to the
level of the free border of the
soft palate
• Boundaries:
Superiorly – Basilar portion
of sphenoid & clivus
Lateral Walls (including the
Eustachian tube opening,
fossae of Rosenmuller and
the mucosa covering the
torus tubarius)
Posterior Wall formed by
Pharyngobasilar fascia
• Floor - formed by superior
surface of soft palate
Johann Christian Rosenmuller, 1808
Seventy to 90% of cases have nodes at some point. Levels IA/B are rarely
involved while levels II and V (the post-cervical chain) can be considered the
first involved nodes for this tumour site.
Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
Normally, lined by pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelium
• Nasopharyngeal (squamous cell) carcinoma
• Nasopharyngeal papillary adenocarcinoma
• Salivary gland-type carcinomas
• Benign epithelial tumours
• Soft tissue tumours
• Haematolymphoid tumours
• Tumours of bone and cartilage
• Secondary tumours
17
WHOhistologicalclassificationof
Nasopharynx
WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
18
Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
Base of the Skull
Snell’s Clinical Anatomy by Regions, 9th ed.
Oral Cavity extends from skin–vermilion junction of the lips to the junction of the hard
and soft palate above and to the line of circumvallate papillae below.
OralCavity
Includes:
Mucosal Lip - Upper And
Lower Lip
Buccal Mucosa
Upper And Lower
Alveolar Ridge
Retromolar Trigone -
mucosa overlying the
ascending ramus of the
mandible from the level of
the posterior surface of the
last molar tooth to the apex
superiorly, adjacent to the
tuberosity of the maxilla
19
OralCavity
Includes:
Floor of the Mouth -
overlying mylohyoid and
hyoglossus; posterior boundary
is the base of the anterior pillar
of the tonsil; contains the ostia
of the submandibular and
sublingual salivary glands
Hard Palate
Anterior Two-Thirds of the
Tongue (Oral Tongue) - from
the line of circumvallate
papillae to the undersurface of
the tongue at the junction of
the floor of the mouth; four
parts : tip, lateral borders,
dorsum and undersurface
(nonvillous ventral surface of
the tongue).
20
21
Lymphaticsof the LowerLip
• Nodal involvement in
cancers of the lip
occurs rarely (<5% at
presentation) but the
incidence is higher
with large, poorly
differentiated tumours
or those at the angle of
the mouth
• The neck nodes can be
a site of potential
relapse and therefore
must be included in
follow-up assessment
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
• Nodal involvement is usually
primarily to the submental
and submandibular glands
followed by the upper deep
cervical nodes, i.e. levels IA,
IB and II, though disease can
spread directly to levels III
and IV, so-called ‘skip’
nodes
• Midline tumours may
develop bilateral nodal
spread
Lymphaticsof the OralCavity
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
22
Oropharynx
23
• Extending from the plane of the superior surface of the soft palate
to the superior surface of the hyoid bone (or vallecula)
• Includes : Base Of The Tongue, Inferior (Anterior) Surface Of The
Soft Palate And The Uvula, Anterior And Posterior Tonsillar Pillars,
Glossotonsillar Sulci, Palatine Tonsils, Lateral And Posterior
Pharyngeal Walls
Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
• 60% of oropharyngeal cancers have nodal involvement at
presentation.
• Tonsillar cancers drain to the adjacent jugulodigastric or
subdigastric node (the so-called ‘tonsillar node’) and then the
remainder of the deep cervical nodes of level II and III.
• The remainder of oropharyngeal cancers are midline structures
and therefore can drain to bilateral nodes.
• Tumours of the soft palate and posterior pharyngeal wall drain to
the retropharyngeal nodes and upper deep cervical lymph nodes,
i.e. level II.
• Base of tongue tumours commonly spread to the mid and upper
cervical nodes, i.e. levels II and III.
Lymphaticsof the Oropharynx
24
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
Normally, Oral cavity and Oropharynx are lined by non-keratinized stratified
squamous epithelium except dorsum of the tongue, hard palate and attached
gingiva lined by keratinized squamous epithelium.
• Squamous cell carcinoma
• Lymphoepithelial carcinoma
• Epithelial Precursor lesions
• Benign epithelial tumours
• Soft tissue tumours
• Haematolymphoid tumours
• Salivary gland tumors
• Mucosal Malignant Melanoma
• Secondary tumours
25
WHOhistologicalclassificationof OralCavity
and Oropharynx
WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
Larynx
• Extend from C3 to C6
• Supraglottis –epiglottis,
Aryepiglottic folds
(laryngeal aspect),
Arytenoids, Ventricular
bands (false cords)
• Glottis - True vocal cords
with anterior and
posterior commissures
• Subglottis : 2 cm long
and extends from 5 mm
below the free edge of
the true vocal cords to
the lower margin of
cricoid cartilage
26
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
Larynx
• The adult larynx is
lined entirely by
squamous epithelium,
with the exception of
the ventricles and the
subglottis which are
lined by respiratory
(pseudostratified
columnar ciliated)
epithelium .
• Initially, lymphatic
spread is upwards to
the jugulodigastric
lymph nodes
immediately beneath
the angle of the jaw.
Tumours also
commonly spread to
the mid-jugular lymph
nodes.
27
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
28
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
Hypopharynx
• Extending from the plane of the
superior border of the hyoid
bone (or vallecula) to the plane
corresponding to the lower
border of the cricoid cartilage
• Includes :
Postcricoid Region - forming the
anterior wall of the hypopharynx
Lateral Hypopharyngeal Wall
Pyriform Sinuses (Right And
Left) : bounded by lateral
pharyngeal wall; and medially -
lateral surface of aryepiglottic
fold and the arytenoid and
cricoid cartilages (75% lesions)
Posterior Hypopharyngeal Wall -
from the level of the superior
surface of the hyoid bone to the
inferior border of the cricoid
cartilage
Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
29
The hypopharynx is typically lined by
nonkeratinizing stratified squamous
epithelium
• The hypopharynx has an
extensive lymphatic supply.
• The majority of piriform fossae
cancers have nodal
involvement at presentation.
There is early spread to the
upper and mid deep cervical
nodes (level II and III) but the
drainage can include all levels
including the supraclavicular
nodes. Spread can be bilateral.
• The posterior pharyngeal wall
drains to the retropharyngeal
nodes and deep cervical
lymph nodes.
• The post-cricoid region drains
to levels III, IV and the
paratracheal nodes (level VI).
Lymphaticsof the
Hypopharynx
30
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
• Squamous cell carcinoma
• Verrucous carcinoma
• Basaloid squamous cell carcinoma
• Papillary squamous cell carcinoma
• Spindle cell carcinoma
• Acantholytic squamous cell carcinoma
• Adenosquamous carcinoma
• Lymphoepithelial carcinoma
• Giant cell carcinoma
• Malignant salivary gland-type tumours 31
WHOhistologicalclassificationof
Hypopharynxand Larynx
WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
• Neuroendocrine tumors
• Benign epithelial tumours
• Soft tissue tumours
• Haematolymphoid tumours
• Tumours of bone and cartilage
• Mucosal Malignant Melanoma
• Secondary tumours
32
WHOhistologicalclassificationof
Hypopharynxand Larynx
WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
33
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
• Retropharyngeal Space – infection spreads to posterior
triangle
• Prevertebral Space - between the prevertebral fascia and the
vertebral column; infection can travel to axilla via axillary
sheath
• Parapharyngeal space (PPS) - anterior to the styloid process
(prestyloid) that extends from the skull base to the level of the
angle of the mandible; contains primarily deep lobe of parotid
gland, fat, vascular structures, and small branches of the
mandibular division of the fifth cranial nerve
• Poststyloid space or carotid space (CS) : enclosed fascial
space located posterior to the styloid process; contains the
internal carotid artery, internal jugular vein, cranial nerves IX–
XII and lymph nodes.
• Masticator space - consists of muscles of mastication
(masseter, pterygoids, and temporalis)
34
Tissue Spaces In The HeadAnd Neck
c
c
35
Infrahyoid transverse section of the neck
Gray’s Anatomy, 41st ed.
36
Vertical section of the body of the mandible close to the
angle showing the masticator space
Snell’s Clinical Anatomy by Regions, 9th ed.
37
Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
• Infratemporal fossa : wedge shaped space below middle
cranial fossa, deep to the ramus of the mandible and posterior
to the maxilla on each side of the skull, located between the
pterygoid process and the maxillary tuberosity
• Pterygopalatine fossa : pyramidal space located deep to
infratemporal fossa and below the apex of the orbit
• Pterygoid fossa : V-shaped fossa enclosed between lateral and
medial pteryoid plates diverging behind
Lymphatic
Drainage:
Neck Nodes
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
38
39
Superiorly – Mylohyoid m.
Posteriorly-
Body of hyoid
Medially -
Anterior
belly of C/L
digastric
muscle
Laterally -
Anterior
belly of
ipsilateral
digastric
muscle
LevelIA
Drains the skin of the chin,
the mid-lower lip, the tip of
the tongue, and the anterior
floor of the mouth
Submental
Nodes
Anteriorly –
Symphysis
menti
Inferiorly-
Platysma M
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
40
Superiorly - Body
of mandible
Posteriorly-
Posterior belly
of digastric
muscle
Medially-
Anterior
belly of
digastric
muscle
Laterally-
Stylohyoid
muscle
LevelIB
Drains lymphatics from the
submental lymph nodes (level
Ia), the lower nasal cavity, the
hard and soft palate, the
maxillary and mandibular
alveolar ridges, the cheek, the
upper and lower lips, and most of
the anterior tongue
Submandibular
Nodes
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Anteriorly –
Symphysis
menti
Inferiorly-
Platysma M
41
Superiorly - Caudal edge of the
lateral process of C1
Inferiorly -
Horizontal
plane defined
by the inferior
border of the
hyoid bone
Anteriorly -
posterior
edge of
posterior
belly of
digastric m
Posteriorly-
Vertical
plane
defined
by the spinal
accessory
nerve
LevelIIA
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Laterally -
medial
surface of
sternocleido
mastoid
Medially-
Medial
edge of
internal
carotid
artery/scal
enius m.
42
Superiorly - Caudal edge of the
lateral process of C1
Inferiorly -
Horizontal
plane defined
by the inferior
border of the
hyoid bone
Anteriorly -
Vertical
plane
defined by
the
spinal
accessory
nerve
Posteriorly
- Lateral
border of
the
sternocleid
omastoid
muscle
LevelIIB
Drains face, the parotid gland,
and the submandibular,
submental and retropharyngeal
nodes; the nasal cavity, the
pharynx, the larynx, the
external auditory canal, the
middle ear, and the sublingual
and submandibular glands
Upper Jugular
Group (IIA &
IIB)
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Medially- Medial edge
of internal carotid
artery/scalenius m.
Laterally -
medial
surface of
sternocleido
mastoid
43
Superiorly - Caudal edge of the
body of the hyoid bone
Inferiorly -
Caudal edge of
cricoid cartilage
Anteriorly-
Anterior
edge of
sternocleid
omastoid
Laterally -
Deep
(medial)
surface of
sternocleid
omastoid
m.
LevelIII
Drains levels II and V, and
retropharyngeal,
pretracheal and recurrent
laryngeal nodes; the base of
the tongue, tonsils, larynx,
hypopharynx and thyroid
gland
Middle Jugular
Group
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Medially- Medial edge of
common carotid
artery/scalenius m.
Posteriorly
- Posterior
edge of
sternocleid
omastoid
44
Superiorly - Caudal edge
of cricoid cartilage
Inferiorly - 2 cm
cranial to sternal
manubrium
Medially -
Medial
edge of
common
carotid
artery/later
al edge of
thyroid
gland/Scale
nius m.
Laterally -
Deep
(medial)
surface of
sternocleido
mastoid
LevelIVA
Drains levels III and V,
retropharyngeal, pretracheal,
and recurrent laryngeal nodes,
and the hypopharynx, larynx,
and thyroid gland.
Lower Jugular
Group
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Anteriorly-
Anterior
edge of
sternocleid
omastoid
Posteriorly
- Posterior
edge of
sternocleid
omastoid
45
Superiorly - Caudal border of level IVa
(2 cm cranial to sternal manubrium)
Inferiorly -
Cranial edge of
sternal
manubrium
Medially - Lateral border of
level VI (pre-tracheal
component)/medial
edge of common
carotid artery
Laterally -
Lateral edge
of scalenius
m.
LevelIVB
Drains levels IVa and Vc, the
pretracheal, and recurrent
laryngeal nodes, the
hypopharynx, esophagus, larynx,
trachea and thyroid gland
Medial
Supraclavicular
Group
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Anteriorly-
Deep
surface of
sternocleid
omastoid
m./deep
aspect of
clavicle
Posteriorly- Apex of
Lung, brachiocephalic
Vein, brachiocephalic
trunk (right side) &
common carotid artery
and subclavian artery
on the left side
46
Superiorly - Cranial edge of the
body of hyoid bone
Inferiorly - Plane just
below transverse
cervical vessels
Anteriorly-
Posterior
edge of
sternocleid
omastoid
m.
Posteriorly-
Anterior
border of
trapezius m.LevelV
VA includes the spinal accessory
nodes and VB includes nodes
following the transverse cervical
vessels & supraclavicular nodes, with
exception of Virchow node (level IV);
Surgically, level V is subdivided into
upper (Va) and lower (Vb) nodes
according to their respective
relationships with the cricoid
cartilage
Posterior
Triangle Group
(VA & VB)
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Laterally -
Platysma
m./skin
Medially - Levator
scapulae m./scalenius m.
Drains occipital and
retro auricular
nodes, the occipital
and parietal scalp,
the skin of the
lateral and posterior
neck and shoulder,
the nasopharynx,
the oropharynx and
the thyroid gland
47
Superiorly - Plane just below
transverse cervical vessels (caudal
border of level V)
Inferiorly - 2 cm
cranial to sternal
manubrium, i.e.
caudal border of
level IVa
Anteriorly-
Skin
Posteriorly-
Anterior
border of
the trapezius
muscle
LevelVC
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
Medially - Lateral edge of
sternocleidomastoid m,
lateral edge of level IVa.
Lateral Supraclavicular Group
Laterally –
Trapezius
and clavicle
Drains the posterior triangle
nodes (level Va and Vb)
Boundarie
s
Level VIa Level VIb
Cranial Caudal edge of the hyoid bone
or caudal edge of the
submandibular gland
Caudal edge of the thyroid
cartilage
Caudal Cranial edge of the sternal
manubrium
Cranial edge of the sternal
manubrium
Anterior Skin/platysma m. Posterior aspect of infrahyoid
(strap) m
Posterior Anterior aspect of the infrahyoid
(strap) m.
Anterior aspect of larynx, thyroid
gland and trachea
Lateral Anterior edges of B/L SCM m. Common carotid artery B/L
Medial - Lateral aspect of trachea &
esophagus
• Level VI – VIA (anterior jugular nodes) and VIB (pre-laryngeal,
pre-tracheal, para-tracheal-recurrent laryngeal nerve nodes)
• Drains the anterior floor of mouth, the tip of the tongue, the
lower lip, the thyroid gland, the glottic and subglottic larynx, the
hypopharynx, and the cervical esophagus
48
• Level VII – VIIA (retropharyngeal nodes) and VIIB (retro-styloid
nodes)
• Drains the mucosa of the nasopharynx, the Eustachian tube and
the soft palate.
49
Boundarie
s
Level VIIa Level VIIb
Cranial Upper edge of body of C1/hard
palate
Base of skull (jugular foramen)
Caudal Cranial edge of the body of the
hyoid bone
Caudal edge of the lateral process
of C1 (upper limit of level II)
Anterior Posterior edge of the superior or
middle pharyngeal constrictor m
Posterior edge of pre-styloid
para-pharyngeal space
Posterior Longus capitis m. and longus
colli m.
Vertebral body of C1, base of skull
Lateral Medial edge of the internal
carotid artery
Styloid process/deep parotid lobe
Medial A line parallel to the lateral edge
of the longus capitis muscle
Medial edge of the internal
carotid artery
• Level VIII - parotid node group : Drains frontal and temporal
skin, the eyelids, the conjunctiva, the auricle, the external
acoustic meatus, the tympanum, the nasal cavities, the root of
the nose, the nasopharynx, and the Eustachian tube
• Level IX – Bucco-facial group : Drains nose, eyelids, & cheek
Boundarie
s
Level VIII Level IX
Cranial Zygomatic arch, external
auditory canal
Caudal edge of the orbit
Caudal Angle of the mandible Caudal edge of the mandible
Anterior Posterior edge of mandidular
ramus (laterally) & medial
pterygoid muscle (medially)
SMAS layer in sub-cutaneous
tissue
Posterior Anterior edge of
sternocleidomastoid m.
(laterally), posterior
belly of digastric m. (medially)
Anterior edge of masseter m.
Lateral Superficial Muscular
Aponeurotic System (SMAS)
layer in sub-cutaneous tissue
SMAS layer in sub-cutaneous
tissue
Medial Styloid process Buccinator m.
50
• Level X – XA (retroauricular nodes) and XB (occipital nodes)
• Drains the posterior surface of the auricle, the external auditory
canal and the adjacent scalp
51
Boundarie
s
Level Xa Level Xb
Cranial Cranial edge of external auditory
canal
External occipital protuberance
Caudal Tip of the mastoid Cranial border of level V
Anterior Posterior edge of the external
auditory canal
Posterior edge of
sternocleidomastoid m
Posterior Posterior edge of
sternocleidomastoid m.
Anterior (lateral) edge of
trapezius m
Lateral Sub-cutaneous tissue Sub-cutaneous tissue
Medial Temporal Bone Splenius capitis m.
52
V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
(superficial intraparotid)
(malar)
(buccal)
(facial)
superficial external
jugular(anterior jugular)
(preauricular)
(mastoid)
(submental)
(subauricular)
53
(subparotid)
(transverse cervical A.)
(deep intra
parotid)
(Infrahyoid)
Mastoid
subauricular
spinal
accessory
nerve
(recurrent or paratracheal)
(prelaryngeal)
(pretracheal)
Head & Neck
• Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage
• Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer
• Role Of HPV And EBV Virus
• Pathology & Prognostic Factors
Etiologyand RiskFactors
1. Tobacco & Alcohol - overexpression of bcl-2 and p53
mutations
2. Leukoplakia - White patch or plaque that cannot be
characterized clinically or pathologically as any other
disease.
3. Erythroplakia - Bright red velvety patch that cannot be
characterized clinically or pathologically as being caused by
any other condition
Hunter KD et al., Nature Reviews Cancer 2005
55
1.
2.
3.
•
4. Oral Submucous Fibrosis
• Generalized fibrosis of the oral cavity tissues resulting in
marked rigidity and trismus.
5. HLA haplotypes, including A2, B46, and B17, are associated
with an increased risk of developing nasopharyngeal
carcinoma (Chan SH et al, Int J Cancer 1983).
6. High consumption of salted fish has been implicated as an
environmental factor in Southern China (Yu MC et al., Cancer
Res 1986)
7. UV radiation
8. HSV 1 & 2,EBV,HPV 16
9. Plummer Vinson syndrome
10. Occupational exposure: dust due to coal, iron, wood
Etiologyand RiskFactors
56
Head & Neck
• Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage
• Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer
• Role Of HPV And EBV Virus
• Pathology & Prognostic Factors
• Human papillomavirus infects basal cells in the stratified
squamous epithelium.
• The 3 HPV oncogenes E5, E6, and E7 promote unrestrained
cellular proliferation to allow for viral amplification and also
contribute to the initiation and progression of cancer via the
same mechanism and by inducing genomic instability
• The standard test for HPV involvement in a tumor (and for
clinical trial enrollment) is detection of cyclin dependent kinase
inhibitor 2A (also known as p16) by Immunohistochemistry
• Particularly affects the palatine tonsils and tongue base;
associated poorly differentiated basaloid histopathology (Gillison
ML et al., 2004).
• Patients with HPV positive tumors, have improved survival after
chemoradiotherapy compared to patients with HPV-negative
tumors (Fakhry C et al., J Natl Cancer Inst 2008)
58
Role of HumanPapillomaVirus
59
2) HPV E6, via activation of the ubiquitin ligase E6AP (E6 associated
protein), causes degradation of p53, leading to inhibition of
apoptosis
3) HPV E5 protein cooperates with E6
and E7 to promote proliferation in infected cells and is thought to
play a minor role in transformation
1) HPV E7 Protein degrades Rb protein
Degradation of Rb results in E2F transcription factors driving
expression of S phase genes, promoting progression through the
cell cycle
HPV
Blitzer GC et al., Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2014
• Several EBV genome products such as viral proteins, RNAs,
and miRNAs may participate in the development of NPC
(Raab-Traub, 2002).
• EBNA1, an EBV encoded nuclear antigen, promotes DNA
damage in NPC cells by reducing p53 levels and inducing
reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Raab-Traub, Seminars in Cancer
Biology 2002)
• Several studies have reported the upregulation of multiple
EBV-encoded miRNAs in NPC, but further studies are needed
to determine the exact role of BamHI fragment A rightward
transcript (BART) micro-RNAs in pathogenesis of NPC (Y Wang
et al, Eur J Cancer Prev. 2017) .
60
Role of Epstein-BarrVirus
61
LMP1 further induces expression of the epidermal growth factor
receptor (EGFR), CD40, cell surface activation markers, adhesion
molecules, and anti-apoptotic factor
EBNA2 and EBNA-LP regulate expression of the latent membrane
proteins, LMP1 and LMP2
LMP1 interacts with the signaling adapter molecules of the tumor
necrosis factor receptor family
EBV
(Raab-Traub, Seminars in Cancer Biology 2002)
62
(Raab-Traub, Seminars in Cancer Biology 2002)
Head & Neck
• Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage
• Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer
• Role Of HPV And EBV Virus
• Pathology & Prognostic Factors
Pathology
• Aberrations in the p53 and Rb tumor suppressor pathways are
the most common molecular events, resulting in uncontrolled
cell proliferation.
• Other mutations include CDKN2A (Cyclin Dependent Kinase
Inhibitor 2A) , PTEN (Phosphatase and Tensin Homolog),
PIK3CA (PIK Catalytic Subunit Alpha) , and HRAS (human
proto-oncogene).
• Mutations in genes that regulate squamous differentiation,
such as NOTCH1 (translocation) , IRF6 (interferon regulatory
factor) , and TP63 - provided the rationale for testing novel
therapeutic targets such as NOTCH inhibitors
64
Stransky N et al., Science 2011
65
Conformational change in the EGFR through dimerization, causing
subsequent auto-activation of the tyrosine kinase from the
intracellular domain of the receptor
intracellular signaling pathway leading to the inhibition of
apoptosis, activation of cell proliferation and angiogenesis, and an
increase in metastatic spread potential
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR ) is overexpressed in
invasive HNSCC
Binding to EGFR by its natural ligands, mainly epidermal growth
factor or transforming growth factor α (TGF-α )
Pathology
Roskoski R Jr., Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2004
66
1. Factors related to Primary Tumor :
a) Tumor Dimension - Tumor Surface Diameter (pathologically
positive cervical LNs, local recurrence and survival); Tumor
Thickness (critical range 3-5 mm, risk of occult nodal
metastasis) & Tumor volume (local control).
b) Margin Status - Positive margin predict local recurrence
c) Malignancy Grading - Cellular Morphology & Host-tumor
interface (High Invasive Cell Grading Score associated with
presence of occult cervical metastases and extracapsular
extension )
d) Perineural Invasion - Involvement of vagal trunk,
glossopharyngeal and trigeminal nerves
e) Vascular Invasion - correlate with presence of cervical and
distant metastases
PrognosticFactors
Head and Neck Cancer: A Multidisciplinary Approach, 4th ed.
ICG includes degree of keratinization, nuclear polymorphism, number of mitoses,
pattern of invasion, stage of invasion, and lymphoplasmacytic infiltration
1.
2. Factors related to the Cervical Lymph Nodes :
a) Number of Lymph Nodes
b) Extracapsular Extension
c) Node location - the presence of nodal metastases outside the
sentinel node region independently decreases 5-year survival
by more than 50%
3. Demographic Parameters : Alcohol and tobacco exposure
(response to radiotherapy, survival and risk of second primary
tumor of aerodigestive tract)
4. Patient’s General Medical Condition : Comorbidities
5. Molecular factors :
a) p53: Loss of function contribute to tumor aggressiveness by
promoting resistance to radiation & chemotherapy, accelerated
growth in hypoxic conditions, and tumor neovascularization.
b) VEGF expression correlate with local-regional recurrence,
distant metastasis, and poor survival.
c) EGFR overexpression correlate with radioresistance.
Head and Neck Cancer: A Multidisciplinary Approach, 4th ed.
67
68
Thank You
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
Normalradiologicalanatomy–Larynxand
hypopharynxregion
78
Indication Irradiation
Paranasal sinuses
Squamous carcinoma
Squamous carcinoma N+ and
undifferentiated carcinoma
Retropharyngeal nodes
Lateral pharyngeal nodes only
Levels I to V on the same side
Nasopharynx
Squamous cell carcinoma T1 – T4 N0
All undiferentiated carcinoma and
squamous carcinoma with node
involvement
Level II, retropharyngeal
and upper posterior triangle
Levels I to V
Nodal IrradiationBy TumorSite
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
79
Indication Irradiation
Oral cavity
T2N0 with well-lateralized primary
T2N1 with well-lateralized primary
T2N0 with primary approaching
midline, all T3N0 and T4N0
All others
Levels I and II on the same side
Levels I to V on the same side
Levels I, II and III bilaterally
Levels I to V bilaterally
Oropharynx
T2N0 tonsil
T2N1 tonsil
T2N0 other sites
All others
Levels I and II on the same side
Levels I to V on the same side
Levels I, II and III bilaterally
Levels I to V bilaterally
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
80
Indication Irradiation
Larynx
T1–2N0 glottic
T3–4N0 glottic
T2N0 supraglottic
All others
No nodal irradiation
Levels II and III bilaterally
Levels II and III bilaterally
Levels I to V bilaterally
Hypopharynx
All Levels I to V bilaterally
Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.

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Pre management head & neck cancer

  • 1. Head & Neck • Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage • Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer • Role Of HPV And EBV Virus • Pathology & Prognostic Factors Presenter : Dr. Varshu Goel First Year Post-Graduate Resident Department of Radiotherapy Maulana Azad Medical College, Delhi
  • 2. • Global incidence - exceeds half a million cases with around 300,000 deaths each year (Chaturvedi et al, J Clin Oncol. 2013) • In India – most common cancer in males and the fifth most common in females (International Agency for Research on Cancer GLOBOCAN, 2012) • 90% of all head and neck cancers are squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) (Global Cancer Statistics, CA Cancer J Clin. 2011) 2 Introduction
  • 3. Head & Neck • Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage • Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer • Role Of HPV And EBV Virus • Pathology & Prognostic Factors
  • 4. Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
  • 5. 5 NasalCavity • Includes Septum, Floor, Lateral Wall & Vestibule • The normal lining of the nasal cavity is pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelium except for the vestibule, that comprises squamous epithelium with sweat and sebaceous glands. • Boundaries : • Superior - cribriform plate of the ethmoidal bone with olfactory apparatus • Inferior - hard palate • Anterior - nasal bones and cartilage that form the external nose • Posterior - posterior border of the hard palate and maxillary sinus • Lateral - formed from the medial walls of the maxillary sinus inferiorly and the ethmoid sinus superiorly; three turbinates
  • 6. 6 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed. The Medial Wall Of The Nasal Cavity (Nasal Septum)
  • 7. 7 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed. The Lateral Wall Of The Nasal Cavity
  • 8. 8 ParanasalSinuses a) Maxillary sinuses - Largest, 15 ml volume b) Ethmoidal Sinuses - Anterior, Middle & Posterior group c) Frontal Sinuses d) Sphenoidal Sinus • Sinuses are lined with pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium • The purpose of the paranasal sinuses is to lighten the bone and give resonance to the voice A. The position of the paranasal sinuses in relation to the face. B. Coronal section through the nasal cavity showing the ethmoidal and the maxillary sinuses Snell’s Clinical Anatomy by Regions, 9th ed.
  • 9. The Lateral Wall Of The Nasal Cavity Bulla Ethmoidalis
  • 10. 10 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed. The Medial Wall Of The Nasal Cavity (Nasal Septum)
  • 11. 11 Gray’s Anatomy, 41st ed. Lymphaticsof the NasalCavity The lymphatic drainage of the nasal cavity can be divided into two. 1. The main part of the nasal cavity drains via the nasopharynx to the retropharyngeal nodes and upper deep cervical nodes (levels IIA and IIB). 2. The lower anterior portion drains to the submandibular (level IB), parotid (preauricular) and jugulodigastric (level IIA) nodes. Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
  • 12. • Lymphatic drainage is typically towards the retropharyngeal (Rouviere’s node) and upper deep cervical nodes (level II) unless the tumour is particularly anteriorly placed when the buccinator, level I and IIA nodes are at risk. • The lymph system is remarkably sparse and, as such, tumours can be quite advanced without involved nodes. 12 Lymphaticsof the ParanasalSinuses Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
  • 13. • Squamous cell carcinoma – originating from the mucosal epithelium and includes a keratinizing and a non-keratinizing type • Lymphoepithelioma - poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma or histologically undifferentiated carcinoma accompanied by a prominent reactive lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate; EBV associated • Sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma - aggressive and distinctive carcinoma of uncertain histogenesis that typically presents with locally extensive disease; composed of pleomorphic tumour cells with frequent necrosis • Adenocarcinoma - glandular malignancies of the sinonasal tract, excluding defined types of salivary gland carcinoma 13 WHOhistologicalclassificationof Nasal Cavityand ParanasalSinuses WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
  • 14. • Salivary gland-type carcinomas • Neuroendocrine tumours (carcinoids) • Benign epithelial tumours • Sinonasal papillomas • Salivary gland-type adenomas • Soft tissue tumours • Haematolymphoid tumours • Neuroectodermal tumors (pNETs) • Tumours of bone and cartilage • Secondary tumours 14 WHOhistologicalclassificationof Nasal Cavityand ParanasalSinuses WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
  • 15. • 12 cm from base of skull to C6 vertebrae Naso-pharynx –C1 & C2 vertebra Oro-pharynx - C2 & C3 vertebrae Hypo-pharynx - C4, C5 & C6 Vertebra 15 Pharynx Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
  • 16. Nasopharynx 16 • Begins at the posterior choana and extends along the plane of the airway to the level of the free border of the soft palate • Boundaries: Superiorly – Basilar portion of sphenoid & clivus Lateral Walls (including the Eustachian tube opening, fossae of Rosenmuller and the mucosa covering the torus tubarius) Posterior Wall formed by Pharyngobasilar fascia • Floor - formed by superior surface of soft palate Johann Christian Rosenmuller, 1808 Seventy to 90% of cases have nodes at some point. Levels IA/B are rarely involved while levels II and V (the post-cervical chain) can be considered the first involved nodes for this tumour site. Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
  • 17. Normally, lined by pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelium • Nasopharyngeal (squamous cell) carcinoma • Nasopharyngeal papillary adenocarcinoma • Salivary gland-type carcinomas • Benign epithelial tumours • Soft tissue tumours • Haematolymphoid tumours • Tumours of bone and cartilage • Secondary tumours 17 WHOhistologicalclassificationof Nasopharynx WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
  • 18. 18 Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed. Base of the Skull
  • 19. Snell’s Clinical Anatomy by Regions, 9th ed. Oral Cavity extends from skin–vermilion junction of the lips to the junction of the hard and soft palate above and to the line of circumvallate papillae below. OralCavity Includes: Mucosal Lip - Upper And Lower Lip Buccal Mucosa Upper And Lower Alveolar Ridge Retromolar Trigone - mucosa overlying the ascending ramus of the mandible from the level of the posterior surface of the last molar tooth to the apex superiorly, adjacent to the tuberosity of the maxilla 19
  • 20. OralCavity Includes: Floor of the Mouth - overlying mylohyoid and hyoglossus; posterior boundary is the base of the anterior pillar of the tonsil; contains the ostia of the submandibular and sublingual salivary glands Hard Palate Anterior Two-Thirds of the Tongue (Oral Tongue) - from the line of circumvallate papillae to the undersurface of the tongue at the junction of the floor of the mouth; four parts : tip, lateral borders, dorsum and undersurface (nonvillous ventral surface of the tongue). 20
  • 21. 21 Lymphaticsof the LowerLip • Nodal involvement in cancers of the lip occurs rarely (<5% at presentation) but the incidence is higher with large, poorly differentiated tumours or those at the angle of the mouth • The neck nodes can be a site of potential relapse and therefore must be included in follow-up assessment Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
  • 22. • Nodal involvement is usually primarily to the submental and submandibular glands followed by the upper deep cervical nodes, i.e. levels IA, IB and II, though disease can spread directly to levels III and IV, so-called ‘skip’ nodes • Midline tumours may develop bilateral nodal spread Lymphaticsof the OralCavity Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed. 22
  • 23. Oropharynx 23 • Extending from the plane of the superior surface of the soft palate to the superior surface of the hyoid bone (or vallecula) • Includes : Base Of The Tongue, Inferior (Anterior) Surface Of The Soft Palate And The Uvula, Anterior And Posterior Tonsillar Pillars, Glossotonsillar Sulci, Palatine Tonsils, Lateral And Posterior Pharyngeal Walls Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed.
  • 24. • 60% of oropharyngeal cancers have nodal involvement at presentation. • Tonsillar cancers drain to the adjacent jugulodigastric or subdigastric node (the so-called ‘tonsillar node’) and then the remainder of the deep cervical nodes of level II and III. • The remainder of oropharyngeal cancers are midline structures and therefore can drain to bilateral nodes. • Tumours of the soft palate and posterior pharyngeal wall drain to the retropharyngeal nodes and upper deep cervical lymph nodes, i.e. level II. • Base of tongue tumours commonly spread to the mid and upper cervical nodes, i.e. levels II and III. Lymphaticsof the Oropharynx 24 Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
  • 25. Normally, Oral cavity and Oropharynx are lined by non-keratinized stratified squamous epithelium except dorsum of the tongue, hard palate and attached gingiva lined by keratinized squamous epithelium. • Squamous cell carcinoma • Lymphoepithelial carcinoma • Epithelial Precursor lesions • Benign epithelial tumours • Soft tissue tumours • Haematolymphoid tumours • Salivary gland tumors • Mucosal Malignant Melanoma • Secondary tumours 25 WHOhistologicalclassificationof OralCavity and Oropharynx WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
  • 26. Larynx • Extend from C3 to C6 • Supraglottis –epiglottis, Aryepiglottic folds (laryngeal aspect), Arytenoids, Ventricular bands (false cords) • Glottis - True vocal cords with anterior and posterior commissures • Subglottis : 2 cm long and extends from 5 mm below the free edge of the true vocal cords to the lower margin of cricoid cartilage 26 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
  • 27. Larynx • The adult larynx is lined entirely by squamous epithelium, with the exception of the ventricles and the subglottis which are lined by respiratory (pseudostratified columnar ciliated) epithelium . • Initially, lymphatic spread is upwards to the jugulodigastric lymph nodes immediately beneath the angle of the jaw. Tumours also commonly spread to the mid-jugular lymph nodes. 27 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
  • 28. 28 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
  • 29. Hypopharynx • Extending from the plane of the superior border of the hyoid bone (or vallecula) to the plane corresponding to the lower border of the cricoid cartilage • Includes : Postcricoid Region - forming the anterior wall of the hypopharynx Lateral Hypopharyngeal Wall Pyriform Sinuses (Right And Left) : bounded by lateral pharyngeal wall; and medially - lateral surface of aryepiglottic fold and the arytenoid and cricoid cartilages (75% lesions) Posterior Hypopharyngeal Wall - from the level of the superior surface of the hyoid bone to the inferior border of the cricoid cartilage Gray’s Anatomy for Students, 3rd ed. 29 The hypopharynx is typically lined by nonkeratinizing stratified squamous epithelium
  • 30. • The hypopharynx has an extensive lymphatic supply. • The majority of piriform fossae cancers have nodal involvement at presentation. There is early spread to the upper and mid deep cervical nodes (level II and III) but the drainage can include all levels including the supraclavicular nodes. Spread can be bilateral. • The posterior pharyngeal wall drains to the retropharyngeal nodes and deep cervical lymph nodes. • The post-cricoid region drains to levels III, IV and the paratracheal nodes (level VI). Lymphaticsof the Hypopharynx 30 Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
  • 31. • Squamous cell carcinoma • Verrucous carcinoma • Basaloid squamous cell carcinoma • Papillary squamous cell carcinoma • Spindle cell carcinoma • Acantholytic squamous cell carcinoma • Adenosquamous carcinoma • Lymphoepithelial carcinoma • Giant cell carcinoma • Malignant salivary gland-type tumours 31 WHOhistologicalclassificationof Hypopharynxand Larynx WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
  • 32. • Neuroendocrine tumors • Benign epithelial tumours • Soft tissue tumours • Haematolymphoid tumours • Tumours of bone and cartilage • Mucosal Malignant Melanoma • Secondary tumours 32 WHOhistologicalclassificationof Hypopharynxand Larynx WHO Classification Of Head & Neck Tumors, IARC Press, 2005
  • 33. 33 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed.
  • 34. • Retropharyngeal Space – infection spreads to posterior triangle • Prevertebral Space - between the prevertebral fascia and the vertebral column; infection can travel to axilla via axillary sheath • Parapharyngeal space (PPS) - anterior to the styloid process (prestyloid) that extends from the skull base to the level of the angle of the mandible; contains primarily deep lobe of parotid gland, fat, vascular structures, and small branches of the mandibular division of the fifth cranial nerve • Poststyloid space or carotid space (CS) : enclosed fascial space located posterior to the styloid process; contains the internal carotid artery, internal jugular vein, cranial nerves IX– XII and lymph nodes. • Masticator space - consists of muscles of mastication (masseter, pterygoids, and temporalis) 34 Tissue Spaces In The HeadAnd Neck
  • 35. c c 35 Infrahyoid transverse section of the neck Gray’s Anatomy, 41st ed.
  • 36. 36 Vertical section of the body of the mandible close to the angle showing the masticator space Snell’s Clinical Anatomy by Regions, 9th ed.
  • 37. 37 Atlas of Human Anatomy, 6th ed. • Infratemporal fossa : wedge shaped space below middle cranial fossa, deep to the ramus of the mandible and posterior to the maxilla on each side of the skull, located between the pterygoid process and the maxillary tuberosity • Pterygopalatine fossa : pyramidal space located deep to infratemporal fossa and below the apex of the orbit • Pterygoid fossa : V-shaped fossa enclosed between lateral and medial pteryoid plates diverging behind
  • 38. Lymphatic Drainage: Neck Nodes Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed. 38
  • 39. 39 Superiorly – Mylohyoid m. Posteriorly- Body of hyoid Medially - Anterior belly of C/L digastric muscle Laterally - Anterior belly of ipsilateral digastric muscle LevelIA Drains the skin of the chin, the mid-lower lip, the tip of the tongue, and the anterior floor of the mouth Submental Nodes Anteriorly – Symphysis menti Inferiorly- Platysma M V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013)
  • 40. 40 Superiorly - Body of mandible Posteriorly- Posterior belly of digastric muscle Medially- Anterior belly of digastric muscle Laterally- Stylohyoid muscle LevelIB Drains lymphatics from the submental lymph nodes (level Ia), the lower nasal cavity, the hard and soft palate, the maxillary and mandibular alveolar ridges, the cheek, the upper and lower lips, and most of the anterior tongue Submandibular Nodes V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Anteriorly – Symphysis menti Inferiorly- Platysma M
  • 41. 41 Superiorly - Caudal edge of the lateral process of C1 Inferiorly - Horizontal plane defined by the inferior border of the hyoid bone Anteriorly - posterior edge of posterior belly of digastric m Posteriorly- Vertical plane defined by the spinal accessory nerve LevelIIA V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Laterally - medial surface of sternocleido mastoid Medially- Medial edge of internal carotid artery/scal enius m.
  • 42. 42 Superiorly - Caudal edge of the lateral process of C1 Inferiorly - Horizontal plane defined by the inferior border of the hyoid bone Anteriorly - Vertical plane defined by the spinal accessory nerve Posteriorly - Lateral border of the sternocleid omastoid muscle LevelIIB Drains face, the parotid gland, and the submandibular, submental and retropharyngeal nodes; the nasal cavity, the pharynx, the larynx, the external auditory canal, the middle ear, and the sublingual and submandibular glands Upper Jugular Group (IIA & IIB) V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Medially- Medial edge of internal carotid artery/scalenius m. Laterally - medial surface of sternocleido mastoid
  • 43. 43 Superiorly - Caudal edge of the body of the hyoid bone Inferiorly - Caudal edge of cricoid cartilage Anteriorly- Anterior edge of sternocleid omastoid Laterally - Deep (medial) surface of sternocleid omastoid m. LevelIII Drains levels II and V, and retropharyngeal, pretracheal and recurrent laryngeal nodes; the base of the tongue, tonsils, larynx, hypopharynx and thyroid gland Middle Jugular Group V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Medially- Medial edge of common carotid artery/scalenius m. Posteriorly - Posterior edge of sternocleid omastoid
  • 44. 44 Superiorly - Caudal edge of cricoid cartilage Inferiorly - 2 cm cranial to sternal manubrium Medially - Medial edge of common carotid artery/later al edge of thyroid gland/Scale nius m. Laterally - Deep (medial) surface of sternocleido mastoid LevelIVA Drains levels III and V, retropharyngeal, pretracheal, and recurrent laryngeal nodes, and the hypopharynx, larynx, and thyroid gland. Lower Jugular Group V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Anteriorly- Anterior edge of sternocleid omastoid Posteriorly - Posterior edge of sternocleid omastoid
  • 45. 45 Superiorly - Caudal border of level IVa (2 cm cranial to sternal manubrium) Inferiorly - Cranial edge of sternal manubrium Medially - Lateral border of level VI (pre-tracheal component)/medial edge of common carotid artery Laterally - Lateral edge of scalenius m. LevelIVB Drains levels IVa and Vc, the pretracheal, and recurrent laryngeal nodes, the hypopharynx, esophagus, larynx, trachea and thyroid gland Medial Supraclavicular Group V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Anteriorly- Deep surface of sternocleid omastoid m./deep aspect of clavicle Posteriorly- Apex of Lung, brachiocephalic Vein, brachiocephalic trunk (right side) & common carotid artery and subclavian artery on the left side
  • 46. 46 Superiorly - Cranial edge of the body of hyoid bone Inferiorly - Plane just below transverse cervical vessels Anteriorly- Posterior edge of sternocleid omastoid m. Posteriorly- Anterior border of trapezius m.LevelV VA includes the spinal accessory nodes and VB includes nodes following the transverse cervical vessels & supraclavicular nodes, with exception of Virchow node (level IV); Surgically, level V is subdivided into upper (Va) and lower (Vb) nodes according to their respective relationships with the cricoid cartilage Posterior Triangle Group (VA & VB) V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Laterally - Platysma m./skin Medially - Levator scapulae m./scalenius m. Drains occipital and retro auricular nodes, the occipital and parietal scalp, the skin of the lateral and posterior neck and shoulder, the nasopharynx, the oropharynx and the thyroid gland
  • 47. 47 Superiorly - Plane just below transverse cervical vessels (caudal border of level V) Inferiorly - 2 cm cranial to sternal manubrium, i.e. caudal border of level IVa Anteriorly- Skin Posteriorly- Anterior border of the trapezius muscle LevelVC V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) Medially - Lateral edge of sternocleidomastoid m, lateral edge of level IVa. Lateral Supraclavicular Group Laterally – Trapezius and clavicle Drains the posterior triangle nodes (level Va and Vb)
  • 48. Boundarie s Level VIa Level VIb Cranial Caudal edge of the hyoid bone or caudal edge of the submandibular gland Caudal edge of the thyroid cartilage Caudal Cranial edge of the sternal manubrium Cranial edge of the sternal manubrium Anterior Skin/platysma m. Posterior aspect of infrahyoid (strap) m Posterior Anterior aspect of the infrahyoid (strap) m. Anterior aspect of larynx, thyroid gland and trachea Lateral Anterior edges of B/L SCM m. Common carotid artery B/L Medial - Lateral aspect of trachea & esophagus • Level VI – VIA (anterior jugular nodes) and VIB (pre-laryngeal, pre-tracheal, para-tracheal-recurrent laryngeal nerve nodes) • Drains the anterior floor of mouth, the tip of the tongue, the lower lip, the thyroid gland, the glottic and subglottic larynx, the hypopharynx, and the cervical esophagus 48
  • 49. • Level VII – VIIA (retropharyngeal nodes) and VIIB (retro-styloid nodes) • Drains the mucosa of the nasopharynx, the Eustachian tube and the soft palate. 49 Boundarie s Level VIIa Level VIIb Cranial Upper edge of body of C1/hard palate Base of skull (jugular foramen) Caudal Cranial edge of the body of the hyoid bone Caudal edge of the lateral process of C1 (upper limit of level II) Anterior Posterior edge of the superior or middle pharyngeal constrictor m Posterior edge of pre-styloid para-pharyngeal space Posterior Longus capitis m. and longus colli m. Vertebral body of C1, base of skull Lateral Medial edge of the internal carotid artery Styloid process/deep parotid lobe Medial A line parallel to the lateral edge of the longus capitis muscle Medial edge of the internal carotid artery
  • 50. • Level VIII - parotid node group : Drains frontal and temporal skin, the eyelids, the conjunctiva, the auricle, the external acoustic meatus, the tympanum, the nasal cavities, the root of the nose, the nasopharynx, and the Eustachian tube • Level IX – Bucco-facial group : Drains nose, eyelids, & cheek Boundarie s Level VIII Level IX Cranial Zygomatic arch, external auditory canal Caudal edge of the orbit Caudal Angle of the mandible Caudal edge of the mandible Anterior Posterior edge of mandidular ramus (laterally) & medial pterygoid muscle (medially) SMAS layer in sub-cutaneous tissue Posterior Anterior edge of sternocleidomastoid m. (laterally), posterior belly of digastric m. (medially) Anterior edge of masseter m. Lateral Superficial Muscular Aponeurotic System (SMAS) layer in sub-cutaneous tissue SMAS layer in sub-cutaneous tissue Medial Styloid process Buccinator m. 50
  • 51. • Level X – XA (retroauricular nodes) and XB (occipital nodes) • Drains the posterior surface of the auricle, the external auditory canal and the adjacent scalp 51 Boundarie s Level Xa Level Xb Cranial Cranial edge of external auditory canal External occipital protuberance Caudal Tip of the mastoid Cranial border of level V Anterior Posterior edge of the external auditory canal Posterior edge of sternocleidomastoid m Posterior Posterior edge of sternocleidomastoid m. Anterior (lateral) edge of trapezius m Lateral Sub-cutaneous tissue Sub-cutaneous tissue Medial Temporal Bone Splenius capitis m.
  • 52. 52 V. Grégoire et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology (2013) (superficial intraparotid) (malar) (buccal) (facial) superficial external jugular(anterior jugular) (preauricular) (mastoid) (submental) (subauricular)
  • 53. 53 (subparotid) (transverse cervical A.) (deep intra parotid) (Infrahyoid) Mastoid subauricular spinal accessory nerve (recurrent or paratracheal) (prelaryngeal) (pretracheal)
  • 54. Head & Neck • Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage • Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer • Role Of HPV And EBV Virus • Pathology & Prognostic Factors
  • 55. Etiologyand RiskFactors 1. Tobacco & Alcohol - overexpression of bcl-2 and p53 mutations 2. Leukoplakia - White patch or plaque that cannot be characterized clinically or pathologically as any other disease. 3. Erythroplakia - Bright red velvety patch that cannot be characterized clinically or pathologically as being caused by any other condition Hunter KD et al., Nature Reviews Cancer 2005 55
  • 56. 1. 2. 3. • 4. Oral Submucous Fibrosis • Generalized fibrosis of the oral cavity tissues resulting in marked rigidity and trismus. 5. HLA haplotypes, including A2, B46, and B17, are associated with an increased risk of developing nasopharyngeal carcinoma (Chan SH et al, Int J Cancer 1983). 6. High consumption of salted fish has been implicated as an environmental factor in Southern China (Yu MC et al., Cancer Res 1986) 7. UV radiation 8. HSV 1 & 2,EBV,HPV 16 9. Plummer Vinson syndrome 10. Occupational exposure: dust due to coal, iron, wood Etiologyand RiskFactors 56
  • 57. Head & Neck • Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage • Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer • Role Of HPV And EBV Virus • Pathology & Prognostic Factors
  • 58. • Human papillomavirus infects basal cells in the stratified squamous epithelium. • The 3 HPV oncogenes E5, E6, and E7 promote unrestrained cellular proliferation to allow for viral amplification and also contribute to the initiation and progression of cancer via the same mechanism and by inducing genomic instability • The standard test for HPV involvement in a tumor (and for clinical trial enrollment) is detection of cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 2A (also known as p16) by Immunohistochemistry • Particularly affects the palatine tonsils and tongue base; associated poorly differentiated basaloid histopathology (Gillison ML et al., 2004). • Patients with HPV positive tumors, have improved survival after chemoradiotherapy compared to patients with HPV-negative tumors (Fakhry C et al., J Natl Cancer Inst 2008) 58 Role of HumanPapillomaVirus
  • 59. 59 2) HPV E6, via activation of the ubiquitin ligase E6AP (E6 associated protein), causes degradation of p53, leading to inhibition of apoptosis 3) HPV E5 protein cooperates with E6 and E7 to promote proliferation in infected cells and is thought to play a minor role in transformation 1) HPV E7 Protein degrades Rb protein Degradation of Rb results in E2F transcription factors driving expression of S phase genes, promoting progression through the cell cycle HPV Blitzer GC et al., Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2014
  • 60. • Several EBV genome products such as viral proteins, RNAs, and miRNAs may participate in the development of NPC (Raab-Traub, 2002). • EBNA1, an EBV encoded nuclear antigen, promotes DNA damage in NPC cells by reducing p53 levels and inducing reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Raab-Traub, Seminars in Cancer Biology 2002) • Several studies have reported the upregulation of multiple EBV-encoded miRNAs in NPC, but further studies are needed to determine the exact role of BamHI fragment A rightward transcript (BART) micro-RNAs in pathogenesis of NPC (Y Wang et al, Eur J Cancer Prev. 2017) . 60 Role of Epstein-BarrVirus
  • 61. 61 LMP1 further induces expression of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), CD40, cell surface activation markers, adhesion molecules, and anti-apoptotic factor EBNA2 and EBNA-LP regulate expression of the latent membrane proteins, LMP1 and LMP2 LMP1 interacts with the signaling adapter molecules of the tumor necrosis factor receptor family EBV (Raab-Traub, Seminars in Cancer Biology 2002)
  • 62. 62 (Raab-Traub, Seminars in Cancer Biology 2002)
  • 63. Head & Neck • Anatomy With Lymphatic Drainage • Etiology of Head And Neck Cancer • Role Of HPV And EBV Virus • Pathology & Prognostic Factors
  • 64. Pathology • Aberrations in the p53 and Rb tumor suppressor pathways are the most common molecular events, resulting in uncontrolled cell proliferation. • Other mutations include CDKN2A (Cyclin Dependent Kinase Inhibitor 2A) , PTEN (Phosphatase and Tensin Homolog), PIK3CA (PIK Catalytic Subunit Alpha) , and HRAS (human proto-oncogene). • Mutations in genes that regulate squamous differentiation, such as NOTCH1 (translocation) , IRF6 (interferon regulatory factor) , and TP63 - provided the rationale for testing novel therapeutic targets such as NOTCH inhibitors 64 Stransky N et al., Science 2011
  • 65. 65 Conformational change in the EGFR through dimerization, causing subsequent auto-activation of the tyrosine kinase from the intracellular domain of the receptor intracellular signaling pathway leading to the inhibition of apoptosis, activation of cell proliferation and angiogenesis, and an increase in metastatic spread potential The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR ) is overexpressed in invasive HNSCC Binding to EGFR by its natural ligands, mainly epidermal growth factor or transforming growth factor α (TGF-α ) Pathology Roskoski R Jr., Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2004
  • 66. 66 1. Factors related to Primary Tumor : a) Tumor Dimension - Tumor Surface Diameter (pathologically positive cervical LNs, local recurrence and survival); Tumor Thickness (critical range 3-5 mm, risk of occult nodal metastasis) & Tumor volume (local control). b) Margin Status - Positive margin predict local recurrence c) Malignancy Grading - Cellular Morphology & Host-tumor interface (High Invasive Cell Grading Score associated with presence of occult cervical metastases and extracapsular extension ) d) Perineural Invasion - Involvement of vagal trunk, glossopharyngeal and trigeminal nerves e) Vascular Invasion - correlate with presence of cervical and distant metastases PrognosticFactors Head and Neck Cancer: A Multidisciplinary Approach, 4th ed. ICG includes degree of keratinization, nuclear polymorphism, number of mitoses, pattern of invasion, stage of invasion, and lymphoplasmacytic infiltration
  • 67. 1. 2. Factors related to the Cervical Lymph Nodes : a) Number of Lymph Nodes b) Extracapsular Extension c) Node location - the presence of nodal metastases outside the sentinel node region independently decreases 5-year survival by more than 50% 3. Demographic Parameters : Alcohol and tobacco exposure (response to radiotherapy, survival and risk of second primary tumor of aerodigestive tract) 4. Patient’s General Medical Condition : Comorbidities 5. Molecular factors : a) p53: Loss of function contribute to tumor aggressiveness by promoting resistance to radiation & chemotherapy, accelerated growth in hypoxic conditions, and tumor neovascularization. b) VEGF expression correlate with local-regional recurrence, distant metastasis, and poor survival. c) EGFR overexpression correlate with radioresistance. Head and Neck Cancer: A Multidisciplinary Approach, 4th ed. 67
  • 78. 78 Indication Irradiation Paranasal sinuses Squamous carcinoma Squamous carcinoma N+ and undifferentiated carcinoma Retropharyngeal nodes Lateral pharyngeal nodes only Levels I to V on the same side Nasopharynx Squamous cell carcinoma T1 – T4 N0 All undiferentiated carcinoma and squamous carcinoma with node involvement Level II, retropharyngeal and upper posterior triangle Levels I to V Nodal IrradiationBy TumorSite Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
  • 79. 79 Indication Irradiation Oral cavity T2N0 with well-lateralized primary T2N1 with well-lateralized primary T2N0 with primary approaching midline, all T3N0 and T4N0 All others Levels I and II on the same side Levels I to V on the same side Levels I, II and III bilaterally Levels I to V bilaterally Oropharynx T2N0 tonsil T2N1 tonsil T2N0 other sites All others Levels I and II on the same side Levels I to V on the same side Levels I, II and III bilaterally Levels I to V bilaterally Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.
  • 80. 80 Indication Irradiation Larynx T1–2N0 glottic T3–4N0 glottic T2N0 supraglottic All others No nodal irradiation Levels II and III bilaterally Levels II and III bilaterally Levels I to V bilaterally Hypopharynx All Levels I to V bilaterally Walter & Miller’s Textbook of Radiotherapy, 7th ed.

Notas del editor

  1. Maxillary Sinus : The base of the pyramid forms the lateral wall of the nasal cavity with the apex extending towards the zygomatic process
  2. Henri Rouvière
  3. fossa of Rosenmuller (lateral nasopharyngeal recess) The opening of the Eustachian tube is anterior to the torus tobarius. Immediately posterior to the torus tubarius is the fossa of Rosenmuller. 
  4. Upper alveolar ridge - posterior margin is the upper end of the pterygopalatine arch. Mucosal Lip - that portion of the lip that comes into contact with the opposing lip.
  5. The valleculla, which is a trough that lies between the tongue base and the epiglottis, lies within this area. Heinrich Wilhelm Gottfried von Waldeyer-Hartz – neuron and chromosome
  6. Saggital Section
  7. Pterygoid fossa (maxillary sinus) Infratemporal fossa (nasopharynx)
  8. Michael Anthony Epstein and Yvonne Barr 1964
  9. Nonkeratinizing nasopharyngeal carcinoma is associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in practically 100% of cases
  10. A clear margin is defined as the distance from the invasive tumor front that is 5 mm or more from the resected margin. A close margin is defined as the distance from the invasive tumor front to the resected margin that is less than 5 mm. A positive margin is defined as carcinoma in situ or as invasive carcinoma at the margin of resection. ----- Meeting Notes (17/07/17 15:39) ----- Nimituzumab Cetuximab 4 mm thickness
  11. Gendicine : adenovirus with p53
  12. ----- Meeting Notes (17/07/17 19:33) ----- ICRU trials RTOG Atlas
  13. In unilateral structures (parotid, buccal mucosa, lateral floor of mouth), it is possible to treat the primary site and ipsilateral neck nodes but, in midline structures, bilateral treatment is required because the lymph drainage may be to either side of the neck