11 Oral Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the distribution of oral cancer based on type.

A

> 90% is Squamous Cell Carcinoma, also called Epidermoid Carcinoma.

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2
Q

What is the typical rate of occurrence and survival rate for patients affected with oral cancer?

A

Squamous Cell Carcinoma: 30k new cases every year. 9k die every year. Average survival rate at 5yrs is 50%. 5th lowest survival rate and the rate is not improving as it has in other types of cancer.

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3
Q

Describe the age distribution and typical popluation affected by oral cancer

A

Affects all ages, but the peak is from 50 -70. Increasing incidence under age 40!!! Affects more males than females 2:1. Risk factors correlate with incidence.

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4
Q

What are seven risk factors for oral cancer?

A

actinic radiation, tobacco products, alcohol abuse, infectious agents (HPV), immunocuppression, genetic defects, environmental contacts

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5
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: Actinic radiation

A

sun damage - lip cancers only

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6
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: smoked tobacco products

A

Smoked tobacco:
- In 75% of cases of oral cancer, the patient was/is a smoker
- Longer duration of smoking = increased incidence of cancer
- Increased usage of tobacco = increased incidence of cancer
- Risk for cigars and pipe smoking essentially = risk for cigarettes (for intraoral squamous
cell carcinoma)

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7
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: smokeless tobacco products

A

Smokeless tobacco:
- A much lower incidence of development of carcinoma when compared with smoked
tobacco
- Usually associated with prolonged use of smokeless products
- Cancer develops in the site of placement of the quid
- Moist vs dry snuff is the critical determinant in carcinogenicity
- Typically 20-30 years usage

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8
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: alcohol abuse

A

Statistically a greater risk factor than tobacco
Risk > 2 pack per day smokers

Effects of alcohol

  • Drying agent (alters epithelial metabolism)
  • Solvent effects
  • Contaminants

More factors come into play as potential causes

  • Nutritional deficiencies are common
  • Detoxification of carcinogens hindered by liver disease
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9
Q

What constitutes alcohol abuse?

A
What constitutes abuse:
- A total of 6 alcohol equivalents per day
Alcohol equivalents:
- One shot (1.5 oz) “hard” liquor
- One glass (6 oz) wine
- One glass/can (12 oz) beer
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10
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: immunosupression

A

A healthy immune system seeks out and destroys cells in the pre-cancerous stages
Factors that degrade the immune system lead to increased cancer incidence:
-Aging!!
-Chronic nutritional deficiency
-Disease states
-Therapeutic intervention

(see details in lecture on each)

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11
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: genetic defects (syndrome association and family disposition)

A

Syndrome associations include basal cell nevus syndrome and gardner’s syndrome. (A specific syndrome associated with oral squamous cell carcinoma has not been reported however)
Family disposition-family history increases risk by about 25x

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12
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: environmental contacts

A

carcinogenic chemicals, foods and/or additives, heat

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13
Q

Oral cancer risk factor: infectious agents (HPV)

A

chronic candidal infection?, HPV 16 and 18 (today, nearly 80% of throat cancer is due to HPV). Any chronic disease state resulting in continuous stimulation of the immune system can result in accumulated genetic defects–>potential cancerous changes)

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14
Q

What are some ways the patient can decrease morbidity and mortality of squamous cell carcinoma?

A

healthy diet, healthy lifestyle, avoid known risk factors, know warning signs, regular screening exams

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15
Q

What are some ways the health care provdier can decrease morbidity and mortality of squamous cell carcinoma?

A

educate patients, regular screening exams, improved screening tools, early detection (find early, while small, and before metastasis)

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16
Q

Describe warning signs for oral/head and neck squamous cell carcinoma using the “CAUTION” acronym.

A

C-Change in sensation/numbness
A-A sore that will not heal
U-Unexplained hoarseness and/or difficulty swallowing
T-Thickening or a lump of recent onset
I-Inability to pronounce certain sounds or slurring of speech
O-Obvious change in a mole, wart, or discolored area
N-Nagging cough

17
Q

Describe clinical presentation of squamous cell carcinoma

A

white plaque (leukoplakia), red plaque-like (erythroplakia), ulcerated, exophytic mass

18
Q

Describe clinical presentation of leukoplakia

A

White plaque

19
Q

Describe clinical presentation of erythroplakia

A

Red plaque-like, Smooth, velvety surface,Slightly raised margin, White surface speckling

20
Q

Describe ulcererated characteristic of squamous cell carinoma

A

Often with a raised, rolled border

Often with a very deep, central crater

21
Q

What does exophytic mass refer to?

A

Often with an irregular surface texture

22
Q

Describe clinical presentation of early lesions.

A

Earliest lesions do NOT show characteristic features that increase index of suspicion!!!

23
Q

Describe clinical presentation of advanced lesions.

A

Advanced lesions:
Firm to hard (indurated)
Non-movable (bound down to adjacent tissues)
Irregular, exophytic growth with poorly defined margins
Non-healing ulceration
Rolled borders are particularly ominous
Pain

24
Q

List the high risk sites for oral cancer.

A

Lower lip
Posterior lateral border of the tongue,Floor of the mouth (Males mostly Increasing incidence in females though) Tonsillar pillars

25
Q

Recognize the potential for oral cancer anywhere in the oral cavity.

A

It occurs everywhere!!!

26
Q

Describe the TNM staging system

A

T-tumor size (1-4 depending on size of tumor)
N-nodal metastasis (0-3 depending on lymph node involvement)
M-metastatic spread (0-1 depending on metastasis)

27
Q

Describe the STNMP staging system

A
S-site of primary tumor
T-tumor size
N-nodal metastasis
M-metastatic spread
P-pathologic grade of the tumor
28
Q

Classify five year survival rate by stage of disease.

A

Stage 1: 77-85%
Stage 2: 66-76%
Stage 3: 41-44%
Stage 4: 9-20%

29
Q

What are some key principles of early diagnosis?

A

identify and document abnormalities, identify risk factors and eliminate them where possible, follow up, and biopsy unless the lesion resolves

30
Q

What are some variations in treatment for patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma?

A

Selection of treatment depends on the stage of the disease and location of the cancer. Modes of therapy: surgical, radioation, chemotherapy, or a combination

31
Q

Describe potential complications of surgical treatment.

A

functional deficit, impaired nutrition, post-surgical infection, speech impairment, drooling, facial deformity

32
Q

Describe potential complications of radiation therapy.

A

dermatitis, mucositis and ulceration, decreased salivation, impaired nutrition, difficulty swallowing, taste alteration, infection (candidiasis/bacterial)

33
Q

Describe potential complications of chemotherapy.

A

mucositis and ulceration, xerostomia, infection (fungal/viral/bacterial), bleeding (anemia), N/V/D, loss of apetitie and neurotoxicity

34
Q

Name (and be able to discuss) four long-term complications of oral cancer treatment.

A

Xerostoma, osteoradionecrosis, trismus/fibrosis, alopecia