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When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base

Internal or common carotid artery encasement (CAE) is observed in almost 2-7% of head and neck cancers (HNC) and designates the tumor with the T4b category. This clinical scenario is associated with a dismal prognosis, owing to the risk for thrombosis and bleeding that usually characterizes such an...

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Autores principales: Orlandi, Ester, Ferrari, Marco, Lafe, Elvis, Preda, Lorenzo, Benazzo, Marco, Vischioni, Barbara, Bonora, Maria, Rampinelli, Vittorio, Schreiber, Alberto, Licitra, Lisa, Nicolai, Piero
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8636461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34869033
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.781205
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author Orlandi, Ester
Ferrari, Marco
Lafe, Elvis
Preda, Lorenzo
Benazzo, Marco
Vischioni, Barbara
Bonora, Maria
Rampinelli, Vittorio
Schreiber, Alberto
Licitra, Lisa
Nicolai, Piero
author_facet Orlandi, Ester
Ferrari, Marco
Lafe, Elvis
Preda, Lorenzo
Benazzo, Marco
Vischioni, Barbara
Bonora, Maria
Rampinelli, Vittorio
Schreiber, Alberto
Licitra, Lisa
Nicolai, Piero
author_sort Orlandi, Ester
collection PubMed
description Internal or common carotid artery encasement (CAE) is observed in almost 2-7% of head and neck cancers (HNC) and designates the tumor with the T4b category. This clinical scenario is associated with a dismal prognosis, owing to the risk for thrombosis and bleeding that usually characterizes such an advanced cancer. Standardized radiological criteria to infer invasion of the carotid artery are lacking. Complete surgical resection in the context of a multimodality treatment is supposed to offer the greatest chances of cure. Surgery can either be carotid-sparing or include carotidectomy. Data on probability of cerebrovascular and non-cerebrovascular complications, risk of carotid blowout, poor oncologic outcomes, and less-than-certain efficacy of diagnostic and interventional preventive procedures against cerebral infarction make it difficult to define surgery as the recommended option among other therapeutic strategies. Non-surgical therapies based on radiation therapy possibly combined with chemotherapy are more frequently employed in HNC with CAE. In this context, carotid blowout is the most feared complication, and its probability increases with tumor stage and cumulative radiation dose received by the vessel. The use of highly conformal radiotherapies such as intensity-modulated particle therapy might substantially improve the manageability of HNC with CAE by possibly reducing the risk of late sequalae. Despite evidence is frail, it appears logical that a case-by-case evaluation through multidisciplinary decision making between head and neck surgeons, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, diagnostic and interventional radiologists, and vascular surgeons are of paramount value to offer the best therapeutic solution to patients affected by HNC with CAE.
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spelling pubmed-86364612021-12-03 When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base Orlandi, Ester Ferrari, Marco Lafe, Elvis Preda, Lorenzo Benazzo, Marco Vischioni, Barbara Bonora, Maria Rampinelli, Vittorio Schreiber, Alberto Licitra, Lisa Nicolai, Piero Front Oncol Oncology Internal or common carotid artery encasement (CAE) is observed in almost 2-7% of head and neck cancers (HNC) and designates the tumor with the T4b category. This clinical scenario is associated with a dismal prognosis, owing to the risk for thrombosis and bleeding that usually characterizes such an advanced cancer. Standardized radiological criteria to infer invasion of the carotid artery are lacking. Complete surgical resection in the context of a multimodality treatment is supposed to offer the greatest chances of cure. Surgery can either be carotid-sparing or include carotidectomy. Data on probability of cerebrovascular and non-cerebrovascular complications, risk of carotid blowout, poor oncologic outcomes, and less-than-certain efficacy of diagnostic and interventional preventive procedures against cerebral infarction make it difficult to define surgery as the recommended option among other therapeutic strategies. Non-surgical therapies based on radiation therapy possibly combined with chemotherapy are more frequently employed in HNC with CAE. In this context, carotid blowout is the most feared complication, and its probability increases with tumor stage and cumulative radiation dose received by the vessel. The use of highly conformal radiotherapies such as intensity-modulated particle therapy might substantially improve the manageability of HNC with CAE by possibly reducing the risk of late sequalae. Despite evidence is frail, it appears logical that a case-by-case evaluation through multidisciplinary decision making between head and neck surgeons, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, diagnostic and interventional radiologists, and vascular surgeons are of paramount value to offer the best therapeutic solution to patients affected by HNC with CAE. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-11-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8636461/ /pubmed/34869033 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.781205 Text en Copyright © 2021 Orlandi, Ferrari, Lafe, Preda, Benazzo, Vischioni, Bonora, Rampinelli, Schreiber, Licitra and Nicolai https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Orlandi, Ester
Ferrari, Marco
Lafe, Elvis
Preda, Lorenzo
Benazzo, Marco
Vischioni, Barbara
Bonora, Maria
Rampinelli, Vittorio
Schreiber, Alberto
Licitra, Lisa
Nicolai, Piero
When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base
title When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base
title_full When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base
title_fullStr When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base
title_full_unstemmed When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base
title_short When Everything Revolves Around Internal Carotid Artery: Analysis of Different Management Strategies in Patients With Very Advanced Cancer Involving the Skull Base
title_sort when everything revolves around internal carotid artery: analysis of different management strategies in patients with very advanced cancer involving the skull base
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8636461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34869033
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.781205
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