Publication details

Systemic Treatment of Recurrent/Metastatic Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck

Authors

SZTURZ Petr VERMORKEN Jan B.

Year of publication 2016
Type Chapter of a book
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Description Most patients with recurrent or metastatic head and neck squamous cell cancers qualify for palliative treatment. The management of these patients includes supportive care only, mono- or multiagent chemotherapy, and more recently targeted therapies. While platinum-based combinations are superior to single-agent therapies in terms of response rate, they are more toxic and so far have not shown to lead to meaningful survival benefit. Attempts to improve on this by using other or additional cytotoxic drugs were unsuccessful in the last 30 years. It was therefore an urgent need to investigate the efficacy of novel anticancer therapies that specifically target the tumor cells in such patients. A recent randomized trial showed that adding cetuximab, an EGFR-directed monoclonal antibody, to a standard platinum-based chemotherapy regimen led to an important survival benefit. Despite the still dismal prognosis, the outcome of this latter trial has changed practice in this category of head and neck cancer patients. The next challenge will be to sort out how to incorporate the numerous targeted agents that are currently studied into the existing treatment strategies, also in consideration of an optimization of their therapeutic index. Human papillomavirus status with immunohistochemical p16 expression as its surrogate marker represents promising prognostic and possibly predictive biomarkers that need to be prospectively validated in future randomized trials.

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