The Journal of laryngology and otology
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Practice Guideline
Psychological management for head and neck cancer patients: United Kingdom National Multidisciplinary Guidelines.
This is the official guideline endorsed by the specialty associations involved in the care of head and neck cancer patients in the UK. It provides recommendations on the assessment and interventions for the psychological management in this patient group. Recommendations • Audit of information supplied to patients and carers should be conducted on an annual basis to update and review content and media presentation. (G) • Patients and carers should be invited to discuss treatment options and relate possible outcomes to functional retention or loss to provide a patient-centred approach. (G) • Clinical staff should inspect their systems of assessment to make them sensitive enough to identify patients with psychological difficulties. (G) • Flexibility, rather than rigid formulation is required to assess patients frequently, and to allow for change in circumstances to be noted. (G) • Multidisciplinary teams should determine the supportive care services available and commission extra assistance to provide patients and carers with timely information, education or brief supportive advice. (G) • Multidisciplinary teams need to inspect specialist services for mental health interventions at structured and complex levels for the small proportion of patients with more serious, but rarer, psychological difficulties. (G) • Clinical staff at all levels should receive communication skills training to raise and maintain consultation expertise with difficult patient and/or carer interactions. (G).
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Practice Guideline
Hypopharyngeal cancer: United Kingdom National Multidisciplinary Guidelines.
This is the official guideline endorsed by the specialty associations involved in the care of head and neck cancer patients in the UK. With an age standardised incidence rate of 0.63 per 100 000 population, hypopharynx cancers account for a small proportion of the head and neck cancer workload in the UK, and thus suffer from the lack of high level evidence. This paper discusses the evidence base pertaining to the management of hypopharyngeal cancer and provides recommendations on management for this group of patients receiving cancer care. Recommendations • Cross-sectional imaging with computed tomography of the head, neck and chest is necessary for all patients; magnetic resonance imaging of the primary site is useful particularly in advanced disease; and computed tomography and positron emission tomography to look for distant disease. (R) • Careful evaluation of the upper and lower extents of the disease is necessary, which may require contrast swallow or computed tomography and positron emission tomography imaging. (R) • Formal rigid endoscopic assessment under general anaesthetic should be performed. (R) • Nutritional status should be proactively managed. (R) • Full and unbiased discussion of treatment options should take place to allow informed patient choice. (G) • Early stage disease can be treated equally effectively with surgery or radiotherapy. (R) • Endoscopic resection can be considered for early well localised lesions. (R) • Bulky advanced tumours require circumferential or non-circumferential resection with wide margins to account for submucosal spread. (R) • Offer primary surgical treatment in the setting of a compromised larynx or significant dysphagia. (R) • Midline lesions require bilateral neck dissections. (R) • Consider management of silent nodal areas usually not addressed for other primary sites. (G) • Reconstruction needs to be individualised to the patients' needs and based on the experience of the unit with different reconstructive techniques. (G) • Consider tumour bulk reduction with induction chemotherapy prior to definitive radiotherapy. (R) • Consider intensity modulated radiation therapy where possible to limit the consequences of wide field irradiation to a large volume. (R) • Use concomitant chemotherapy in patients who are fit enough and consider epidermal growth factor receptor blockers for those who are less fit. (R).
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Practice Guideline
Pre-treatment clinical assessment in head and neck cancer: United Kingdom National Multidisciplinary Guidelines.
This is the official guideline endorsed by the specialty associations involved in the care of head and neck cancer patients in the UK. This paper provides recommendations on the pre-treatment clinical assessment of patients presenting with head and neck cancer. Recommendations • Comorbidity data should be collected as it is important in the analysis of survival, quality of life and functional outcomes after treatment as well as for comparing results of different treatment regimens and different centres. (R) • Patients with hypertension of over 180/110 or associated target organ damage, should have antihypertensive medication started pre-operatively as per British Hypertension Society guidelines. (R) • Rapidly correcting pre-operative hypertension with beta blockade appears to cause higher mortality due to stroke and hypotension and should not be used. (R) • Patients with poorly controlled or unstable ischaemic heart disease should be referred for cardiology assessment pre-operatively. (G) • Patients within one year of drug eluting stents should be discussed with the cardiologist who was responsible for their percutaneous coronary intervention pre-operatively with regard to cessation of antiplatelet medication due to risk of stent thrombosis. (G) • Patients with multiple recent stents should be managed in a centre with access to interventional cardiology. (G) • Surgery after myocardial infarction should be delayed if possible to reduce mortality risk. (R) • Patients with critical aortic stenosis (AS) should be considered for pre-operative intervention. (G) • Clopidogrel should be discontinued 7 days pre-operatively; warfarin should be discontinued 5 days pre-operatively. (R) • Patients with thromboembolic disease or artificial heart valves require heparin therapy to bridge peri-operative warfarin cessation, this should start 2 days after last warfarin dose. (R) • Cardiac drugs other than angotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II antagonists should be continued including on the day of surgery. (R) • Angotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II antagonists should be withheld on the day of surgery unless they are for the treatment of heart failure. (R) • Post-operative care in a critical care area should be considered for patients with heart failure or significant diastolic dysfunction. (R) • Patients with respiratory disease should have their peri-operative respiratory failure risk assessed and critical care booked accordingly. (G) • Patients with severe lung disease should be assessed for right heart disease pre-operatively. (G) • Patients with pulmonary hypertension and right heart failure will be at extraordinarily high risk and should have the need for surgery re-evaluated. (G) • Perioperative glucose readings should be kept within 4-12 mmol/l. (R) • Patients with a high HbA1C facing urgent surgery should have their diabetes management assessed by a diabetes specialist. (G) • Insulin-dependent diabetic patients must not omit insulin for more than one missed meal and will therefore require an insulin replacement regime. (R) • Patients taking more than 5 mg of prednisolone daily should have steroid replacement in the peri-operative period. (R) • Consider proton pump therapy for patients taking steroids in the peri-operative phase if they fit higher risk criteria. (R) • Surgery within three months of stroke carries high risk of further stroke and should be delayed if possible. (R) • Patients with rheumatoid arthritis should have flexion/extension views assessed by a senior radiologist pre-operatively. (R) • Patients at risk of post-operative cognitive dysfunction and delirium should be highlighted at pre-operative assessment. (G) • Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) must have enteral access so drugs can be given intra-operatively. Liaison with a specialist in PD is essential. (R) • Intravenous iron should be considered for anaemia in the urgent head and neck cancer patient. (G) • Preoperative blood transfusion should be avoided where possible. (R) • Where pre-operative transfusion is essential it should be completed 24-48 hours pre-operatively. (R) • An accurate alcohol intake assessment should be completed for all patients. (G) • Patients considered to have a high level of alcohol dependency should be considered for active in-patient withdrawal at least 48 hours pre-operatively in liaison with relevant specialists. (R) • Parenteral B vitamins should be given routinely on admission to alcohol-dependent patients. (R) • Smoking cessation, commenced preferably six weeks before surgery, decreases the incidence of post-operative complications. (R) • Antibiotics are necessary for clean-contaminated head and neck surgery, but unnecessary for clean surgery. (R) • Antibiotics should be administered up to 60 minutes before skin incision, as close to the time of incision as possible. (R) • Antibiotic regimes longer than 24 hours have no additional benefit in clean-contaminated head and neck surgery. (R) • Repeat intra-operative antibiotic dosing should be considered for longer surgeries or where there is major blood loss. (R) • Local antibiotic policies should be developed and adhered to due to local resistance patterns. (G) • Individual assessment for venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk and bleeding risk should occur on admission and be reassessed throughout the patients' stay. (G) • Mechanical prophylaxis for VTE is recommended for all patients with one or more risk factors for VTE. (R) • Patients with additional risk factors of VTE and low bleeding risk should have low molecular weight heparin at prophylactic dose or unfractionated heparin if they have severe renal impairment. (R).
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Practice Guideline
Nutritional management in head and neck cancer: United Kingdom National Multidisciplinary Guidelines.
Nutritional support and intervention is an integral component of head and neck cancer management. Patients can be malnourished at presentation, and the majority of patients undergoing treatment for head and neck cancer will need nutritional support. This paper summarises aspects of nutritional considerations for this patient group and provides recommendations for the practising clinician. ⋯ As energy requirements may be elevated post-operatively, monitor weight and adjust intake as required. (R) • Aim for energy and protein intakes of at least 30 kcal/kg/day and 1.2 g protein/kg/day in patients receiving radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy. Patients should have their weight and nutritional intake monitored regularly to determine whether their energy requirements are being met. (R) • Perform nutritional assessment of cancer patients frequently. (G) • Initiate nutritional intervention early when deficits are detected. (G) • Integrate measures to modulate cancer cachexia changes into the nutritional management. (G) • Start nutritional therapy if undernutrition already exists or if it is anticipated that the patient will be unable to eat for more than 7 days. Enteral nutrition should also be started if an inadequate food intake (60 per cent of estimated energy expenditure) is anticipated for more than 10 days. (R) • Use standard polymeric feed. (G) • Consider gastrostomy insertion if long-term tube feeding is necessary (greater than four weeks). (R) • Monitor nutritional parameters regularly throughout the patient's cancer journey. (G) • Pre-operative: ○ Patients with severe nutritional risk should receive nutrition support for 10-14 days prior to major surgery even if surgery has to be delayed. (R) ○ Consider carbohydrate loading in patients undergoing head and neck surgery. (R) • Post-operative: ○ Initiate tube feeding within 24 hours of surgery. (R) ○ Consider early oral feeding after primary laryngectomy. (R) • Chyle Leak: ○ Confirm chyle leak by analysis of drainage fluid for triglycerides and chylomicrons. (R) ○ Commence nutritional intervention with fat free or medium chain triglyceride nutritional supplements either orally or via a feeding tube. (R) ○ Consider parenteral nutrition in severe cases when drainage volume is consistently high. (G) • Weekly dietetic intervention is offered for all patients undergoing radiotherapy treatment to prevent weight loss, increase intake and reduce treatments interruptions. (R) • Offer prophylactic tube feeding as part of locally agreed guidelines, where oral nutrition is inadequate. (R) • Offer nutritional intervention (dietary counselling and/or supplements) for up to three months after treatment. (R) • Patients who have completed their rehabilitation and are disease free should be offered healthy eating advice as part of a health and wellbeing clinic. (G) • Quality of life parameters including nutritional and swallowing, should be measured at diagnosis and at regular intervals post-treatment. (G).
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Practice Guideline
Recurrent head and neck cancer: United Kingdom National Multidisciplinary Guidelines.
This is the official guideline endorsed by the specialty associations involved in the care of head and neck cancer patients in the UK. Recurrent cancers present some of the most challenging management issues in head and neck surgical and oncological practice. This is rendered even more complex by the poor evidence base to support management options, the substantial implications that treatments can have on the function and quality of life, and the difficult decision-making considerations for supportive care alone. ⋯ Recommendations • Consider baseline and serial scanning with computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance (CT and/or MR) to detect recurrence in high-risk patients. (R) • Patients with head and neck cancer recurrence being considered for active curative treatment should undergo assessment by positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography (PET-CT) scan. (R) • Patients with recurrence should be assessed systematically by a team experienced in the range of management options available for recurrence including surgical salvage, re-irradiation, chemotherapy and palliative care. (R) • Management of patients with laryngeal recurrence should include input from surgeons with experience in transoral surgery and partial laryngectomy for recurrence. (G) • Expertise in transoral surgery and partial laryngectomy for recurrence should be concentrated to a few surgeons within each multidisciplinary teams. (G) • Transoral or open partial laryngectomy should be offered as definitive treatment modality for highly-selected patients with recurrent laryngeal cancer. (R) • Patients with OPC recurrence should have p16 human papilloma virus status assessed. (R) • Patients with OPC recurrence should be considered for salvage surgical treatment by an experienced team, with reconstructive expertise input. (G) • Transoral surgery appears to be an effective alternative to open surgery for the management of OPC recurrence in carefully selected patients. (R) • Consider elective selective neck dissections in patients with recurrent primaries with N0 necks, especially in advanced cases. (R) • Selective neck dissection (with preservation of nodal levels, especially level V, that are not involved by disease) in patients with nodal (N+) recurrence appears to be as effective as modified or radical neck dissections. (R) • Use salivary bypass tubes following salvage laryngectomy. (R) • Use interposition muscle-only pectoralis major or free flap for suture line reinforcement if performing primary closure following salvage laryngectomy. (R) • Use inlaid pedicled or free flap to close wound if there is tension at the anastomosis following laryngectomy. (R) • Perform secondary puncture in post chemoradiotherapy laryngectomy patients. (R) • Triple therapy with platinum, cetuximab and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) appears to provide the best outcomes for the management of patients with recurrence who have a good performance status and are fit to receive it. If not fit, then combinations of platinum and cetuximab or platinum and 5-FU may be considered. (R) • Patients with non-resectable recurrent disease should be offered the opportunity to participate in phases I-III clinical trials of new therapeutic agents. (R) • Chemo re-irradiation appears to improve locoregional control, and may have some benefit for overall survival, at the risk of considerable acute and late toxicity. Benefit must be weighed carefully against risks, and patients must be counselled appropriately. (R) • Target volumes should be kept tight and elective nodal irradiation should be avoided. (R) • Best supportive care should be offered routinely as part of the management package of all patients with recurrent cancer even in the case of those who are being treated curatively. (R).