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Resection Margins in Head and Neck Cancer Surgery: An Update of Residual Disease and Field Cancerization

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CANCERS
卷 13, 期 11, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13112635

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head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; residual disease; field cancerization; recurrence; second primary tumor; molecular diagnosis; leukoplakia

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Treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma relies heavily on local and regional control, but recurrence can occur due to residual disease and field cancerization. Surgical resection is a key aspect of treatment, but a significant percentage of patients still experience locoregional recurrences despite clear surgical margins.
Simple Summary Curative treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is largely dependent on locoregional control of the disease. However, HNSCCs frequently recur, and even after surgery with histologically tumor-free surgical margins, tumors may relapse in approximately 10-30% of patients. The development of local relapse despite the fact that surgical margins were tumor-free relates to two independent pathobiological mechanisms: minimal residual disease and field cancerization. Here, we outline the cellular and biological background of local relapse that resulted in a most recently reported clinical trial. We further discuss directions that may improve treatment results in the future. Surgery is one of the mainstays of head and neck cancer treatment, and aims at radical resection of the tumor with 1 cm tumor-free margins to obtain locoregional control. Surgical margins are evaluated by histopathological examination of the resection specimen. It has been long an enigma that approximately 10-30% of surgically treated head and neck cancer patients develop locoregional recurrences even though the resection margins were microscopically tumor-free. However, the origins of these recurrences have been elucidated by a variety of molecular studies. Recurrences arise either from minimal residual disease, cancer cells in the surgical margins that escape detection by the pathologist when examining the specimen, or from precancerous mucosal changes that may remain unnoticed. Head and neck tumors develop in mucosal precursor changes that are sometimes visible but mostly not, fueling research into imaging modalities such as autofluorescence, to improve visualization. Mostly unnoticed, these precancerous changes may stay behind when the tumor is resected, and subsequent malignant progression will cause a local relapse. This led to a clinical trial of autofluorescence-guided surgery, of which the results were reported in 2020. This review focuses on the most recent literature of the improved diagnosis of the resection margins of surgically treated head and neck cancer patients, the pathobiological origin of recurrent disease, and relevant biomarkers to predict local relapse. Directions for further research will be discussed, including potential options for improved and personalized treatment, based on the most recently published data.

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