Treatment of Advanced Head and Neck Cancer: Past, Present, and Future
September 1st 2008Bruce Culliney and colleagues have provided a thorough and well written summary of the literature regarding multimodality treatment of patients with locoregionally advanced or unresectable head and neck malignancies. In particular, they offer a detailed outline of recent insights into radiation dosing and fractionation and their optimal use in the combined-modality setting.
Anti-EGFR Therapies: Clinical Experience in Colorectal, Lung, and Head and Neck Cancers
April 29th 2006Anti-EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) therapies, including tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and monoclonal antibodies, demonstrate activity in a variety of tumor types. While both inhibit the EGFR pathway, they act via different mechanisms.
Commentary (Brockstein/Vokes): Revisiting Induction Chemotherapy for Head and Neck Cancer
June 1st 2005Argiris et al present a comprehensivereview of inductionchemotherapy for head andneck cancer, and should be lauded fortheir meticulous work. This papercarefully delineates and categorizesmost of the relevant induction chemotherapystudies in head and neckcancer performed over the past 3 decades.The authors have sought to answerquestions regarding the optimalnumber of chemotherapy cycles (acritical factor when one uses responseto induction chemotherapy to determineeligibility for organ preservationor in an attempt to enhance curerates), the optimal chemotherapyregimen, and the possibility of a sitespecificbenefit to induction chemotherapy.The paper assesses benefitbased on treatment intent-that is, organpreservation vs survival benefit.Importantly, by excavating the layersof the past, the authors provide aframework with which to construct anew paradigm of treatment for headand neck cancer that may again incorporateinduction chemotherapy.
Commentary (Cohen/Vokes): Gene Therapy for Head and Neck Cancers
March 1st 2001This issue of Oncology features an excellent review of gene therapy for head and neck cancers. Lamont and colleagues have highlighted the principles of genetic intervention, the current state of available therapies, and the results of human trials in an organized and coherent manner.
Doublets and Triplets: New Drug Combinations in the Palliative Care of NSCLC
October 2nd 1997Chemotherapy has been shown to prolong survival in patients with stage IV non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, traditional cisplatin (Platinol)-containing regimens are associated with significant toxicity.
Concomitant Cisplatin, Vinorelbine, and Radiation in Advanced Chest Malignancies
Newer chemotherapy drugs have shown encouraging activity in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. Based on these improved outcomes, as well as the high rate of distant relapse in patients with locally advanced disease, several recent studies have evaluated the use of systemic therapy in patients with earlier-stage disease.
Phase I Study of Docetaxel and Concomitant Chest Radiation
Data from the Radiation Therapy Oncology Groupand Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group indicate that increased survival
Integration of Vinorelbine into Chemotherapy Strategies for Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
June 1st 1995Meta-analyses of randomized clinical studies comparing combination chemotherapy versus "best supportive care" for advanced non-small-cell lung cancer have revealed a small, but statistically significant survival