Book Details
Orange Code:61054
Paperback:355 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. Oral Cancer Overview: The Significance of Metastasis and Surgical Management of the Neck2. The Role of Diagnostic Imaging in Identifying Cervical Metastases in Oral Cavity Cancer3. Sentinel Node Biopsy in Oral Cancer4. Prediction of Nodal Metastases from Genomic Analyses of the Primary Tumor5. The Role of High Throughput Molecular Analysis of Biofluids and Tumors in Patients with Oral Cancer6. Adjuvant Therapy for Patients with Oral Cavity Cancer7. Animal Models of Oral Cancer Metastasis8. TGFb Signaling in Head and Neck Cancer Development and Metastases9. Growth Factor Receptor Signaling and Metastasis of Oral Cancer10. Nuclear Transcription Factors and Signaling Pathways in Oral Cancer Metastasis11. Wnt/b-Catenin Signaling and Oral Cancer Metastasis12. Role of Tumor Stromal Interactions and Proteases in Oral Cancer Metastasis13. Chemokines and Their Receptors in Oral Cancer Metastasis14. Hypoxia, Angiogenesis, and Oral Cancer Metastasis15. Cancer Stem Cells and Oral Cavity Cancer Metastasis
Description:
Squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity (SCCOC) is one of the most prevalent tumors of the head and neck region. Despite improvements in treatment, the survival of patients with SCCOC has not significantly improved over the past several decades. Most frequently, treatment failure takes the form of local and regional recurrences, but as disease control in these areas improves, SCCOC treatment failures more commonly occur as distant metastasis. The presence of cervical lymph node metastasis is the most reliable adverse prognostic factor in patients with SCCOC, and extracapsular spread (ECS) of cervical lymph nodes metastasis is a particularly reliable predictor of regional and distant recurrence and death from disease. Decisions regarding elective and therapeutic management of cervical lymph node metastases are made mainly on clinical grounds as we cannot always predict cervical lymph node metastasis from the size and extent of invasion of the primary tumors. Therefore the treatment of the neck disease in the management of SCCOC remains controversial. The promise of using biomarker-based treatment decisions has yet to be fully realized due to our poor understanding of the mechanisms of regional and distant metastases of SCCOC. We will summarize the current status of investigations into SCCOC metastases and potential of these studies to impact basic research investigators and clinicians confronting SCCOC in the future.
|