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Follow-up after treatment for head and neck cancer: United Kingdom National Multidisciplinary Guidelines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2016

R Simo*
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, Guy's and St Thomas’ Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Guy's, King's and St Thomas’ Medical and Dental School, London, UK
J Homer
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, Manchester Royal Infirmary and Christie Hospital, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
P Clarke
Affiliation:
Department of ENT, Charing Cross and Royal Marsden Hospitals, London, UK
K Mackenzie
Affiliation:
Glasgow Royal Infirmary, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
V Paleri
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, The Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Northern Institute of Cancer Research, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
P Pracy
Affiliation:
Department of ENT Head and Neck Surgery, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK
N Roland
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Aintree University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK
*
Address for correspondence: Ricard Simo, Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, Guy's and St Thomas’ Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Guy's, King's and St Thomas’ Medical and Dental School, London, UK E-mail: ricardsimo1@icloud.com
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Abstract

This is the official guideline endorsed by the specialty associations involved in the care of head and neck cancer patients in the UK. In the absence of high-level evidence base for follow-up practices, the duration and frequency are often at the discretion of local centres. By reviewing the existing literature and collating experience from varying practices across the UK, this paper provides recommendations on the work up and management of lateral skull base cancer based on the existing evidence base for this rare condition.

Recommendations

• Patients should be followed up to a minimum of five years with a prolonged follow-up for selected patients. (G)

• Patients should be followed up at least two monthly in the first two years and three to six monthly in the subsequent years. (G)

• Patients should be seen in dedicated multidisciplinary head and neck oncology clinics. (G)

• Patients should be followed up by dedicated multidisciplinary clinical teams. (G)

• The multidisciplinary follow-up team should include clinical nurse specialists, speech and language therapists, dietitians and other allied health professionals in the role of key workers. (G)

• Clinical assessment should include adequate clinical examination including fibre-optic rigid or flexible nasopharyngolaryngoscopy. (R)

• Magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography imaging should be used when recurrence is suspected. (R)

• Narrow band imaging can be used in the follow-up in selected sites. (R)

• Second primary tumours should be part of rationale of follow-up and therefore adequate screening strategies should be used to detect them. (G)

• Patients should be educated with regard to the appearance and detection of recurrences. (G)

• Patients with persistent pain should be investigated to exclude recurrent disease. (R)

• Patients should be offered support with tobacco and alcohol cessation services. (R)

Type
Guidelines
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © JLO (1984) Limited 2016

Introduction

It is accepted that the follow-up of patients who had treatment for head and neck cancers is a fundamental part of their care.Reference Simo, Bradley, Chevalier, Dikkers, Eckel and Matar 1 Reference Digonnet, Hamoir, Andry, Haigenz, Takes and Vander Poorten 4 The reasons of post-treatment follow-up include:

  • Evaluation of treatment response

  • Early identification of recurrence

  • Early detection of new primary tumours

  • Monitoring and management of complications

  • Optimisation of rehabilitation

  • Provision of support to patients and their families.

Controversy exists in how these aims are achieved.Reference Haas, Houser and Gancer 5 , Reference Morton, Hay and Macann 6 Increasing efforts are being made to rationalise the structure and timing of head and neck follow-up clinics.

The general structure of follow-up clinics is to have initial high-frequency visits especially in the first two years when the risk of loco-regional recurrence is known to be high and then reduce frequency, with follow-up often finishing at five years. In the UK, the structure of these clinics is often arbitrary and reflects institutional and clinician-led practices with very little evidence to support any one system.

Evidence to support follow-up for early detection of tumour recurrence is lacking. However, there is a belief that follow-up clinics have inherent value and to date all published studies recognise this fact. 7

In order to rationalise follow-up, patients could be divided into low and high risk. This is well recognised in thyroid cancer, but it is not the case in all other types of head and neck cancer especially squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). It is a belief that, this categorisation could help to determine which patients should be followed for more than five years. It would also help to establish which screening test may be needed in order to detect recurrence or second primaries.

General considerations

Length

The length of follow-up is generally five years although there are many clinicians who follow-up patients for longer periods or even for life.Reference Schwartz, Barker, Chansky, Yueh, Raminfar and Drago 8 Follow-up of patients over five years would be justified for the following groups: high-risk patients, specific tumours (e.g. adenoid cystic carcinomas), patients who have undergone complex treatments who require on-going rehabilitation and support, detection of new primary tumours and patient preference. Fear of recurrence is prevalent in cancer patients and continued attendance at clinic helps to mitigate this.

Recommendation

  • Patients should be followed up to a minimum of five years with a prolonged follow-up for selected patients (G)

Frequency

At present, there is no evidence that high frequency of follow-up visits confers any benefit in terms of morbidity and mortality. However, there is evidence that the majority of clinicians in the UK support the follow-up of patients, in regular high-frequency intervals in the first two years when the risk of locoregional recurrence is high followed by a decrease in frequency after the second year. The follow-up in the first two years should be between four to eight weeks and from three to six months thereafter. 7

Recommendation

  • Patients should be followed up at least two monthly in the first two years and three to six monthly in the subsequent years (G)

Setting

At present, 90 per cent of the clinicians treating head and neck cancer in the UK see the patients in dedicated head and neck clinics for the duration of the follow-up.

Recommendation

  • Patients should be seen in dedicated multidisciplinary head and neck oncology clinics (G)

Type of health professional

At present patients are followed up by their treating clinicians and their teams. Allied health professionals including speech and language therapists, dieticians and clinical nurse specialists may offer specific follow-up in their areas of expertise, but this is usually in addition to the medical follow-up. The introduction of the clinical nurse specialist and the key worker role in the management of patients with head and neck cancer has opened lines of communication between the patient and family and the clinical teamReference Trinidade, Kothari, Andreou, Hewitt and O'Flynn 9 should any problems arise.

Recommendations

  • Patients should be followed up by the dedicated multidisciplinary clinical teams (G)

  • The multidisciplinary follow-up team should include clinical nurse specialists, speech and language therapists, dietitians and other allied health professionals in the role of key workers (G)

Clinical assessment

Traditionally, clinical assessment has been the most important aspect of the follow-up in patients treated for head and neck cancer. The clinical evaluation is done by inspection, palpation and at present with fibre-optic rigid or flexible nasopharyngolaryngoscopy. Rigid stroboscopy can also be used in patients who have been treated for laryngeal cancer.

Recommendation

  • Clinical assessment should include adequate clinical examination, including fibre-optic rigid or flexible nasopharyngolaryngoscopy (R)

Screening investigations

Currently there is evidence that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography (PET–CT) scanning are superior at detecting recurrence and second primaries.Reference Ul-Hassan, Simo, Guerrero-Urbano, Oakley, Jeannon and Cook 10 , Reference Isles, McConkey and Mehanna 11 This is especially true in some tumour sites such as the nasopharynx and following treatment with chemo-radiation. Positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography has also the advantage of being a systemic evaluation. Diffusion-weighted MR has been recently applied with promising results; however, its accurate interpretation requires specific training and experience. Narrow band imagingReference Piazza, Cocco, De Benedetto, Del Bon, Nicolai and Peretti 12 (NBI), possibly associated with high definition television technology, has been shown to be an adjunctive imaging tool due to its specific capability to selectively address superficial persistences and/or recurrences or second primary tumours by enhancing their pathognomonic neoangiogenetic pattern. It has been reported that its use can detect 18 per cent more true positive laryngeal cancerous lesions than conventional white light endoscopy. This is true even after radiotherapy (RT) or chemoradiotherapy, due to the high accuracy (98 per cent) of NBI in differentiating between neoplastic disease and post-RT inflammatory and/or cicatricial changes.

Recommendations

  • Magnetic resonance imaging and PET–CT imaging should be used when recurrence is suspected (R)

  • Narrow band imaging can be used in the follow-up in selected sites (R)

Second primary tumours

The incidence of second primary tumours varies between 5 and 12 per cent at five years. There is good evidence to indicate that patients with head and neck SCC have an increased risk of developing second primary malignant tumours.Reference Leon, Quer, Diez, Orus, Lopez-Pousa and Burgues 13 , Reference Leon, Martinez, Lopez, Garcia and Quer 14 This risk appears to be constant throughout the follow-up period, with an incidence ranging from 2 to 4 per cent per year. Traditionally, patients undergoing follow-up for head and neck cancer underwent a chest radiograph every year. However, there is evidence that these have not been able to identify metastasis with any confidence.

Recommendation

  • Second primary tumours should be part of rationale of follow-up and therefore adequate screening strategies should be used to detect them (G)

Specific considerations

Second-look microlaryngoscopy

In laryngeal cancer, especially in those patients treated with transoral laser microsurgical excision, it is advisable to perform second-look microlaryngoscopy,Reference Preuss, Cramer, Drebber, Klussman, Eckel and Gunitinas-Lichius 15 especially in scenarios where there is lack of agreement between the intraoperative and histological findings regarding the completeness of resection. The rationale of this is to provide evidence of complete resection, detect residual tumour and to perform further treatment should this be necessary.

Patients with persistent or recurrent pain without clinical evidence of disease

Pain complaints must be regarded as a serious warning sign of recurrent disease during follow-up of HNC patients,Reference Bradley, Mackenzie, Wight, Pracy and Paleri 16 , Reference Scharpf, Karnell, Christensen and Funk 17 even in the absence of an endoscopically visible persistence and/or recurrence. Persistent neck pain can be the first symptom of recurrent disease in 70 per cent of patients and can be an independent predictor of both recurrence and five-year survival rate. Pain should always prompt the clinician to initiate a thorough set of investigations, both by imaging and/or endoscopy under general anaesthesia, in order to reduce possible diagnostic delays. Pain without endoscopic evidence of disease is more frequently encountered after RT or chemoradiotherapy, but it is possible even after surgery. This symptom is usually caused by submucosal disease recurrence possibly hidden by oedematous mucosa, or associated with chondritis, chondronecrosis or osteonecrosis as a result of previous treatments.

Tumour markers

There is no evidence that the use of tumour markers is any value in the follow-up of patients with head and neck SCCs. The use of tumour markers in the follow-up of patients with thyroid cancer is addressed elsewhere in these guidelines.

Patient education

It has been recognised that the education of patients plays an essential role in the detection of recurrences. The vast majority of recurrences are diagnosed following the occurrence of new symptoms and thus patients should be educated about the need to seek help when appropriate. It has also been recognised that continuing smoking and alcohol drinking increases the risk of recurrence and second primary tumours. It is therefore imperative that patients are advised and offered support with regards to the detrimental effects of tobacco smoking and alcohol addiction.

Recommendations

  • Patients should be educated with regards to the appearance and detection of recurrences (G)

  • Patients with persistent pain should investigate to exclude recurrent disease (R)

  • Patients should be offered support with tobacco and alcohol cessation services (R)

Key points

  • The aims of follow up of patients after treatment for head and neck cancers are manifold

  • The frequency of follow-up is higher in the first two years, with reduced frequency subsequently, finishing at five years

  • Medical, nursing and allied health professionals all play important roles in providing follow up care

  • Change in patient symptoms during follow up is the most frequent indication of recurrent disease and must be regarded seriously, even if clinical examination reveals no abnormalities.

References

1 Simo, R, Bradley, P, Chevalier, D, Dikkers, F, Eckel, H, Matar, N, et al. European Laryngological Society. ELS Recommendations for the follow-up of patients treated for laryngeal cancer. Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol 2014;27:2469–79CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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3 Kothari, P, Trinidade, A, Hewitt, RJD, Singh, A, O'Flynn, P. The follow-up of patients with head and neck cancer: an analysis of 1039 patients. Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol 2011;268:1191–200Google Scholar
4 Digonnet, A, Hamoir, M, Andry, G, Haigenz, M, Takes, RP, Vander Poorten, V et al. Post-therapeutic surveillance strategies in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol 2013;270:1569–80Google Scholar
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6 Morton, R, Hay, KD, Macann, A. On completion of curative treatment of head and neck cancer: why follow-up? Curr Opin Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 2004;12:142–6Google Scholar
7 National Institute of Care Excellence (NICE). Improving Outcomes in Head and Neck Cancers – The Manual. 2004 http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/CSGHN (accessed 20 October 2015)Google Scholar
8 Schwartz, DL, Barker, J Jr, Chansky, K, Yueh, B, Raminfar, L, Drago, P, et al. Postradiotherapy surveillance practice for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma – too much for too little? Head Neck 2003;25:990–9Google Scholar
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10 Ul-Hassan, F, Simo, R, Guerrero-Urbano, T, Oakley, R, Jeannon, JP, Cook, GJ. Can (18)F-FDG PET/CT reliably assess response to primary treatment of head and neck cancer? Clin Nucl Med 2013;38:263–5Google Scholar
11 Isles, MG, McConkey, C, Mehanna, HM. A systematic review and meta-analysis of the role of positron emission tomography in the follow-up of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma following radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy. Clin Otolaryngol 2008;33:210–22CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
12 Piazza, C, Cocco, D, De Benedetto, L, Del Bon, F, Nicolai, P, Peretti, G. Narrow band imaging and high definition television in the assessment of laryngeal cancer: a prospective study on 279 patients. Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol 2010;267:409–14CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13 Leon, X, Quer, M, Diez, S, Orus, C, Lopez-Pousa, A, Burgues, J. Second neoplasm in patients with head and neck cancer. Head and Neck 1999;21:204–9Google Scholar
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15 Preuss, SF, Cramer, K, Drebber, U, Klussman, JP, Eckel, HE, Gunitinas-Lichius, O. Second-look microlaryngoscopy to detect residual carcinoma in patients after laser surgery for T1 and T2 laryngeal cancer. Acta Otolaryngol 2008;16:15 Google Scholar
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17 Scharpf, J, Karnell, LH, Christensen, AJ, Funk, GF. The role of pain in head and neck cancer recurrence and survivorship. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 2009;135:789–94Google Scholar
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