Nasopharyngeal cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What is the incidence of nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) in the United States vs. in Asian countries?

A

NPC is rare in the United States (0.2–0.5 in 100,000) but endemic in Asia (25–50 in 100,000).

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2
Q

What are the environmental risk factors associated with NPC?

A

Consumption of salted fish and preserved meats, EBV infection, and smoking for keratinizing squamous cell type (no alcohol association)

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3
Q

What is the median age at Dx for NPC?

A

∼50 yrs

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4
Q

Is there a sex predilection for NPC?

A

Yes. Males > Females (3:1)

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5
Q

What are the anatomic boundaries that make up the nasopharynx (NPX)?

A

Superior: sphenoid bone
Inferior: soft palate
Posterior: clivus/C1–2
Anterior: post edge of choanae

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6
Q

From what anatomic location do most NPCs arise?

A

Fossa of Rosenmuller (pharyngeal recess)

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7
Q

What is the local pattern of spread for NPC superiorly, inferiorly, posteriorly, laterally, and anteriorly?

A

Superiorly: invades (via the foramen lacerum) the cavernous sinus with initial CN VI involvement
Inferiorly/posteriorly: OPX
Laterally: parapharyngeal space
Anteriorly: nasal cavity

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8
Q

What 2 CN syndromes are commonly associated with NPC, and what CNs are involved in each?

A

Petrosphenoidal syndrome: CNs III–IV and VI involvement (oculomotor signs/Sx)
Retroparotidian syndrome: CN IX–XII involvement

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9
Q

What CNs or structures traverse through the base of skull sinuses/foramina (e.g., cavernous sinus, foramen rotundum, ovale, lacerum, jugular, hypoglossal)?

A

Cavernous sinus: CNs III–IV, V1 and V2, and VI
Foramen rotundum: V2
Foramen ovale: V3
Foramen lacerum: cartilage of the eustachian tube
Jugular foramen: CNs IX–XI
Hypoglossal canal: CN XII

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10
Q

What are the histologic subtypes of NPC and corresponding WHO classifications?

A
Keratinizing SCC (WHO type I, 25%). Sporadic form
Nonkeratinizing carcinoma: Differentiated (WHO type II, 12%).
Undifferentiated (WHO type III 63% vs. 95% in Asia)
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11
Q

Which type of NPC is endemic and prone to distant recurrence?

A

Nonkeratinizing undifferentiated (WHO type III) is endemic (better LC but higher metastatic risk).

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12
Q

Which type of NPC is associated with smoking and has poor LC but a lower propensity for DM?

A

Keratinizing SCC (WHO type I) is associated with smoking, poorer LC, and less distant spread.

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13
Q

Which type of NPC is most strongly associated with EBV exposure?

A

Nonkeratinizing undifferentiated (WHO type III)

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14
Q

With what autoimmune condition can NPC be associated?

A

Dermatomyositis

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15
Q

What histologic feature of NPC is an adverse prognostic factor in terms of LC and OS?

A

Presence of keratin (WHO type I)

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16
Q

What role does p53 play in the pathogenesis of NPC?

A

Little. p53 alteration is seen in the minority of cases (unlike other H&N cancers).

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17
Q

What is a commonality b/t NPX and OPX cancers?

A

Viral-associated tumors (EBV-NPX: HPV-OPX) have better LC but higher propensity for distant spread compared to nonviral-associated tumors in these
regions.

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18
Q

What are some common presenting Sx in pts with NPC?

A

Neck mass (>60%); epistaxis, headache, diplopia, facial numbness, otalgia, and nasal congestion. Trismus and/or CN deficits are seen with more advanced Dz.

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19
Q

What is the workup for a pt who presents with a neck node and a suspicious mass in the NPX according to the NCCN guidelines?

A

H&P, nasopharyngolaryngoscopy and Bx of the lesion, MRI with gadolinium of base of skull, NPX, and neck to clavicles, CT of skull base/neck with contrast as indicated; dental, speech and swallow, and audiology evaluations
as indicated, and PET scan or other imaging to evaluate for DM

20
Q

What is the DDx for a pt with a nasopharyngeal mass?

A

Carcinoma, lymphoma, melanoma, plasmacytoma, angiofibroma, RMS (children), and mets

21
Q

What % of NPC pts present with palpable LAD?

A

60%–90%

22
Q

What % of NPC pts present with bilat LAD?

A

Up to 50%

23
Q

Adenopathy near the mastoid tip is indicative of involvement of which nodal group?

A

Retropharyngeal nodes (node of Rouviere)

24
Q

Pts with upper-level V LAD are most likely to have what kind of H&N primary?

A

NPC

25
Q

What factors predict for DM in pts with NPC?

A

Lower neck nodal involvement, advanced nodal stage, and nonkeratinizing undifferentiated (WHO type III) histology

26
Q

What are the common DM sites for NPC?

A

Bones, lungs, and liver

27
Q

What correlates better with DM spread in NPC: N stage or T stage?

A

N stage

28
Q

T staging for NPC

A

T0 No primary identified with EBV+ cervical node(s)
T1 NPX ± OPX ± nasal cavity without parapharyngeal involvement
T2 Parapharyngeal extension ± adjacent ST involvement (medial or lat pterygoid, prevertebral muscles)
T3 Base of skull bones ± PNS ± cervical vertebra, pterygoid structures
T4 intracranial extension, CNs, hypopharynx, orbit, parotid, beyond lat pterygoid muscle

29
Q

N staging for NPC

A

N1 Unilat cervical ≤6 cm ± retropharyngeal LN ≤6 cm (unilat or bilat), above caudal border of cricoid
N2 Bilat cervical ≤6 cm above the caudal border of the cricoid
N3 >6 cm and/or extension or involvement below the caudal border of the cricoid

30
Q

What is the typical Tx paradigm for pts with NPC?

A

RT alone for stage I, CRT for stages II–IVA, chemo (with RT reserved for focal palliation) for stage IVB

31
Q

What must be done before planning the NPC pt for RT?

A

Nutrition consult, dental evaluation are recommended before RT.

32
Q

When is Sg indicated in the management of NPC?

A

To Bx the lesion and in cases of selective neck dissection for persistent Dz after CRT.

33
Q

For early-stage NPC, what are the typical survival and control rates with RT alone?

A

With RT alone, the 3-yr OS is 70%–100% for stage I–II NPC and LC rates are 70%–80% for T1–T2 lesions.

34
Q

What stages of NPC should be treated with concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CRT)?

A

Per the Intergroup 0099 study (Al Sarraf M et al., JCO 1998), all T3–T4 or N+ pts should be considered for CRT. Per RTOG 0225 (Lee N et al., JCO 2009), pts with T2 and N+ Dz should be considered (AJCC 8th edition
staging).

35
Q

What was the CRT regimen used for locally advanced NPC in the Intergroup 0099 (Al-Sarraf et al.) study?

A

Concurrent chemo with cisplatin (100 mg/m2) q3 wks and RT to 70 Gy → adj chemo with cisplatin/5-FU × 3 cycles

36
Q

What were the PFS and OS outcomes in the Intergroup 0099 (Al-Sarraf et al.) trial?

A

In Intergroup 0099, 3-yr PFS was 24% vs. 69%, and 3-yr OS was 46% vs. 76% in favor of CRT over RT alone. B/c of this striking difference, the study was closed early. This was 1 of the 1st studies to demonstrate a survival
benefit with CRT.

37
Q

What are the main criticisms of the Intergroup 0099 (Al-Sarraf et al.) study?

A

Major criticisms of Intergroup 0099 include the large number of pts (25%) with WHO type I NPC (not typically seen in endemic areas) and the poor results of the RT-alone arm. Single-institution studies with RT alone (PMH:
Chow E et al., Radiother Oncol 2002) for locally advanced NPC had better 5-yr DFS (48%) and OS (62%). Other groups (NYU: Cooper JS et al., IJROBP
2000) also demonstrated better outcomes with RT alone (3-yr DFS was 43%, and 3-yr OS was 61%).

38
Q

What are the 3 key confirmatory randomized trials from Asia that demonstrated a benefit with CRT vs. RT alone for locoregionally advanced NPC?

A
1. Hong Kong (NPC-9901: Lee AWM et al., Cancer 2017): 348 pts, RCT, median f/u 10.7 yrs; concurrent cisplatin + RT + adj chemo vs. RT alone, no adj chemo; CRT improved PFS (56% vs. 42%), LRC (87% vs. 74%),
and OS (62% vs. 49%, p = .047) but not DM rate; toxicities similar @10 yrs (52% vs. 47%)
  1. Singapore (SQNP01: Wee J et al., JCO 2005): 221 pts, RCT, median f/u 3.2 yrs; used Al-Sarraf regimen: better DFS (72% vs. 53%), OS (80% vs. 65%), and DM rate (13% vs. 30%); greater toxicity with CRT; confirmed results of Intergroup 0099 for endemic NPC
  2. Taiwan (Lin JC et al., JCO 2003): 284 pts, median f/u 5.4 yrs; cisplatin/5-FU + RT vs. RT alone: better PFS (72% vs. 53%) and OS (72% vs. 54%). The subgroup reanalysis (Lin JC et al., IJROBP 2004) showed that CRT
    benefited low-risk “advanced” NPC (LN <6 cm, no SCV) but not high-risk “advanced” pts
39
Q

Is there a benefit to the addition of induction chemo followed CRT in locally advanced NPC?

A

Yes. Sun Trial (Sun et al., Lancet Oncol 2016). 480 pts. RCT of induction TPF f/b CRT vs. CRT alone. Median follow-up 3.75 yrs. Improved 3-yr: FFS (80% vs. 72%), OS (92% vs. 86%), DMFS (90% vs. 83%). No significant
difference in LRF.

40
Q

Is there a benefit with the use of adj chemo after definitive CRT in locally advanced NPC?

A

Maybe. Network Meta-analysis (Ribassin-Majed et al., JCO 2017) found the addition of adj chemo ranked sup to CRT alone for PFS, LRC and OS. However, only PFS was statistically significant.

41
Q

Estimate the LC of NPC treated with IMRT to 70 Gy in standard fx.

A

UCSF data (Lee N, IJROBP 2004) suggests LC rates as high as 97% for NPC pts treated with IMRT.

42
Q

What is the typical IMRT dose painting technique, and what are the corresponding IMRT doses used in the Tx of NPC?

A

Many institutions (MSKCC/RTOG) employ the SIB technique: 2.12 Gy × 33 = 69.96 Gy to GTV, 1.8 Gy × 33 = 59.4 Gy to intermediate-risk areas, and 1.64 Gy × 33 = 54 Gy to low-risk areas.

43
Q

How would you support the use of IMRT in NPC?

A

Better salivary outcomes with IMRT were demonstrated in data from Queen Mary Hospital (Pow EH et al., IJROBP 2006): 51 pts, stage II NPC, 2D vs. IMRT. At 2 mos, there was no difference in xerostomia; however, over time,
QOL and objective salivary function improved for the IMRT group.

44
Q

What are the RTOG 0225 dose constraints for the chiasm/optic nerves when using IMRT for NPC?

A

Per RTOG 0225, the dose constraints for the chiasm/optic nerves are 54 Gy or 1% of the PTV not >60 Gy.

45
Q

What are the accepted RTOG 0225 dose constraints for the parotids?

A

Per RTOG 0225, the dose constraints for the parotids are as follows: mean dose <26 Gy (should be achieved in at least 1 gland) or at least 20 cc of the combined volume of both parotid glands <20 Gy or at least 50% of 1 gland <30 Gy.

46
Q

Why might sparing of the parotid glands not be sufficient to prevent xerostomia?

A

Sparing of the parotids alone may not be sufficient b/c mucus production by minor salivary glands may be necessary for subjective improvement, according to data from Prince of Wales Hospital (Kam MK et al., JCO 2007): 60 pts randomized to IMRT or 2D-RT. Objective improvement in both stimulated and unstimulated salivary flow was found, but not in the subjective improvement of xerostomia.

47
Q

What is the NCCN-recommended f/u schedule for NPC pts?

A

H&P with nasopharyngolaryngoscopy (q1–3 mos for yr 1, q2–6 mos for yr 2, q4–8 mos for yrs 3–5, and q12 mos if >5 yrs), imaging (for signs/Sx or smoking Hx/surveillance), TSH q6–12 mos (if neck irradiated), speech/hearing/dental evaluation, and smoking cessation