Browsing by Author "Strojan, Primoz"
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- Cervical lymph node metastasis in adenoid cystic carcinoma of oral cavity and oropharynx: A collective international reviewPublication . Suarez, Carlos; Barnes, Leon; Silver, Carl E.; Rodrigo, Juan P.; Shah, Jatin P.; Triantafyllou, Asterios; Rinaldo, Alessandra; Cardesa, Antonio; Pitman, Karen T.; Kowalski, Luiz P.; Robbins, K. Thomas; Hellquist, Henrik; Medina, Jesus E.; Bree, Remco de; Takes, Robert P.; Coca-Pelaz, Andres; Bradley, Patrick J.; Gnepp, Douglas R.; Teymoortash, Afshin; Strojan, Primoz; Mendenhall, William M.; Eloy, Jean Anderson; Bishop, Justin A.; Devaney, Kenneth O.; Thompson, Lester D. R.; Hamoir, Marc; Slootweg, Pieter J.; Vander Poorten, Vincent; Williams, Michelle D.; Wenig, Bruce M.; Skalova, Alena; Ferlito, AlfioThe purpose of this study was to suggest general guidelines in the management of the NO neck of oral cavity and oropharyngeal adenoid cystic carcinoma (AdCC) in order to improve the survival of these patients and/or reduce the risk of neck recurrences. The incidence of cervical node metastasis at diagnosis of head and neck AdCC is variable, and ranges between 3% and 16%. Metastasis to the cervical lymph nodes of intraoral and oropharyngeal AdCC varies from 2% to 43%, with the lower rates pertaining to palatal AdCC and the higher rates to base of the tongue. Neck node recurrence may happen after treatment in 0-14% of AdCC, is highly dependent on the extent of the treatment and is very rare in patients who have been treated with therapeutic or elective neck dissections, or elective neck irradiation. Lymph node involvement with or without extracapsular extension in AdCC has been shown in most reports to be independently associated with decreased overall and cause-specific survival, probably because lymph node involvement is a risk factor for subsequent distant metastasis. The overall rate of occult neck metastasis in patients with head and neck AdCC ranges from 15% to 44%, but occult neck metastasis from oral cavity and/or oropharynx seems to occur more frequently than from other locations, such as the sinonasal tract and major salivary glands. Nevertheless, the benefit of elective neck dissection (END) in AdCC is not comparable to that of squamous cell carcinoma, because the main cause of failure is not relaied to neck or local recurrence, but rather, to distant failure. Therefore, END should be considered in patients with a cN0 neck with AdCC in some high risk oral and oropharyngeal locations when postoperative RT is not planned, or the rare AdCC-high grade transformation. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Cervical lymph node metastasis in adenoid cystic carcinoma of the larynx: a collective international reviewPublication . Coca-Pelaz, Andres; Barnes, Leon; Rinaldo, Alessandra; Cardesa, Antonio; Shah, Jatin P.; Rodrigo, Juan P.; Suarez, Carlos; Eloy, Jean Anderson; Bishop, Justin A.; Devaney, Kenneth O.; Thompson, Lester D. R.; Wenig, Bruce M.; Strojan, Primoz; Hamoir, Marc; Bradley, Patrick J.; Gnepp, Douglas R.; Silver, Carl E.; Slootweg, Pieter J.; Triantafyllou, Asterios; Vander Poorten, Vincent; Williams, Michelle D.; Skalova, Alena; Hellquist, Henrik; Teymoortash, Afshin; Medina, Jesus E.; Robbins, K. Thomas; Pitman, Karen T.; Kowalski, Luiz P.; de Bree, Remco; Mendenhall, William M.; Takes, Robert P.; Ferlito, AlfioAdenoid cystic carcinoma (AdCC) of the head and neck is a well-recognized pathologic entity that rarely occurs in the larynx. Although the 5-year locoregional control rates are high, distant metastasis has a tendency to appear more than 5 years post treatment. Because AdCC of the larynx is uncommon, it is difficult to standardize a treatment protocol. One of the controversial points is the decision whether or not to perform an elective neck dissection on these patients. Because there is contradictory information about this issue, we have critically reviewed the literature from 1912 to 2015 on all reported cases of AdCC of the larynx in order to clarify this issue. During the most recent period of our review (1991-2015) with a more exact diagnosis of the tumor histology, 142 cases were observed of AdCC of the larynx, of which 91 patients had data pertaining to lymph node status. Eleven of the 91 patients (12.1%) had nodal metastasis and, based on this low proportion of patients, routine elective neck dissection is therefore not recommended.
- Cervical lymph node metastasis in high-grade transformation of head and neck adenoid cystic carcinoma: a collective international reviewPublication . Hellquist, Henrik; Skalova, Alena; Barnes, Leon; Cardesa, Antonio; Thompson, Lester D. R.; Triantafyllou, Asterios; Williams, Michelle D.; Devaney, Kenneth O.; Gnepp, Douglas R.; Bishop, Justin A.; Wenig, Bruce M.; Suarez, Carlos; Rodrigo, Juan P.; Coca-Pelaz, Andres; Strojan, Primoz; Shah, Jatin P.; Hamoir, Marc; Bradley, Patrick J.; Silver, Carl E.; Slootweg, Pieter J.; Vander Poorten, Vincent; Teymoortash, Afshin; Medina, Jesus E.; Robbins, K. Thomas; Pitman, Karen T.; Kowalski, Luiz P.; de Bree, Remco; Mendenhall, William M.; Eloy, Jean Anderson; Takes, Robert P.; Rinaldo, Alessandra; Ferlito, AlfioAdenoid cystic carcinoma (AdCC) is among the most common malignant tumors of the salivary glands. It is characterized by a prolonged clinical course, with frequent local recurrences, late onset of metastases and fatal outcome. High-grade transformation (HGT) is an uncommon phenomenon among salivary carcinomas and is associated with increased tumor aggressiveness. In AdCC with high-grade transformation (AdCC-HGT), the clinical course deviates from the natural history of AdCC. It tends to be accelerated, with a high propensity for lymph node metastasis. In order to shed light on this rare event and, in particular, on treatment implications, we undertook this review: searching for all published cases of AdCC-HGT. We conclude that it is mandatory to perform elective neck dissection in patients with AdCC-HGT, due to the high risk of lymph node metastases associated with transformation.
- COVID-19 vaccinations: summary guidance for Cancer patients in 28Languages: breaking barriers to Cancer patient InformationPublication . Mauri, Davide; Kamposioras, Konstantinos; Tsali, Lampriani; Dambrosio, Mario; De Bari, Berardino; Hindi, Nadia; Salembier, Carl; Nixon, Joanna; Dimitrios, Tzachanis; Alongi, Flippo; Hameed, Hassan; Valachis, Antonios; Papadimitriou, Konstantinos; Corradini, Stefanie; Popovic, Lazar; Kopecky, Jindrich; Rodriguez, Andres; Antunac, Katarina; Yi, Junlin; Lovey, Jozsef; Strojan, Primoz; Saraireh, Haytham; Røtterud, Ranveig; Chojnacka, Marzanna; Olalla, Santa Cruz; Chilingirova, Natalia; De Mello, Ramon Andrade; Amaral, Giovanna Araujo; Arbabi, Farsid; Vidra, Radu; Rapushi, Erjeta; Takeuchi, Dan; Christopoulos, Chirstos; Ivanova, Irina; Djan, Igor; Petricevic, Branka; Cellini, Francesco; Mihaylova, Iglika; Plavetic, Natalija Dedic; Kuhar, Cvetka Grašič; Takeuchi, Elena; Kountourakis, Pantelis; Ntellas, Panagiotis; Gazouli, Ioanna; Gkoura, Stefania; Yuce, Salih; ER, Özlem; Yasmina, Chait; Kumaran, Gireesh; Spahiu, Orges; Yusuf, Aasim; Gono, Paulina; Apostolidis, Kathi; Tolia, MariaBackground: Covid-19 vaccination has started in the majority of the countries at the global level. Cancer patients are at high risk for infection, serious illness, and death from COVID-19 and need vaccination guidance and support. Guidance availability in the English language only is a major limit for recommendations' delivery and their application in the world's population and generates information inequalities across the different populations. Methods: Most of the available COVID-19 vaccination guidance for cancer patients was screened and scrutinized by the European Cancer Patients Coalition (ECPC) and an international oncology panel of 52 physicians from 33 countries. Results: A summary guidance was developed and provided in 28 languages in order to reach more than 70 percent of the global population. Conclusion: Language barrier and e-guidance availability in the native language are the most important barriers when communicating with patients. E-guidance availability in various native languages should be considered a major priority by international medical and health organizations that are communicating with patients at the global level.
- How phenotype guides management of the most common malignant salivary neoplasms of the Larynx?Publication . Lopez, Fernando; Williams, Michelle D.; Skalova, Alena; Hellquist, Henrik; Suarez, Carlos; Nixon, Iain J.; Rodrigo, Juan P.; Cardesa, Antonio; Strojan, Primoz; Quer, Miquel; Hunt, Jennifer L.; Rinaldo, Alessandra; Ferlito, AlfioSalivary gland carcinomas of the larynx are uncommon. Adenoid cystic carcinoma is the most prevalent type of salivary gland carcinoma in this region, although other histologies such as mucoepidermoid carcinoma and adenocarcinomas have been reported. These tumors may present with advanced-stage due to nonspecific symptoms and their relatively slow-growing nature. The index of suspicion for a non-squamous cell carcinoma entity should be high when a submucosal mass is present. An accurate diagnosis is mandatory due to the impact each biologic entity has on treatment and outcome. Data concerning treatment and outcome are scarce, but primary surgery with utmost focus on free surgical margins is the treatment of choice. The role of adjuvant radiotherapy has not been well defined, although there is an agreement that it should be considered in advanced-stage or high-grade disease. This review considers only the most common malignant salivary neoplasms of the larynx with a focus on clinical management of these tumors.
- Lymphomas of the head and neck region: an updatePublication . Cabecadas, Jose; Martinez, Daniel; Andreasen, Simon; Mikkelsen, Lauge Hjorth; Molina-Urra, Ricardo; Hall, Diane; Strojan, Primoz; Hellquist, Henrik; Bandello, Francesco; Rinaldo, Alessandra; Cardesa, Antonio; Ferlito, AlfioThe field of haematopathology is rapidly evolving and for the non-specialized pathologist receiving a specimen with the possibility of a lymphoid malignancy may be a daunting experience. The coincidence of the publication, in 2017, of the WHO monographies on head and neck and haematopoietic and lymphoid tumours prompted us to write this review. Although not substantially different from lymphomas elsewhere, lymphomas presenting in this region pose some specific problems and these are central to the review. In addition, differences in subtype frequency and morphological variations within the same entity are discussed. The difficulty in diagnosis related to some specimens led us to briefly mention common subtypes of systemic lymphomas presenting in the head and neck region.
- Update on neuroendocrine carcinomas of the larynxPublication . Strosberg, Carolina; Ferlito, Alfio; Triantafyllou, Asterios; Gnepp, Douglas R.; Bishop, Justin A; Hellquist, Henrik; Strojan, Primoz; Willems, Stefan M; Stenman, Göran; Rinaldo, Alessandra; Hernandez-Prera, Juan C.Laryngeal neuroendocrine carcinomas are heterogeneous neoplasms characterized by neuroendocrine differentiation. Their prognoses are dependent on tumor type, therefore different classifications have been developed. Moreover, other tumors have overlapping pathologic features posing a range of diagnostic possibilities.