Indian clinical practice consensus guidelines for the management of laryngeal cancer: Update 2022

In laryngeal cancer, the goal of treatment is to achieve maximum cure and preserve function of the larynx with good voice quality. In early disease, transoral laser microsurgery is the preferred choice of treatment. An option for treatment of carcinoma in situ is radiotherapy (RT). In locally advanc...

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Published inCancer research, statistics, and treatment (Online) Vol. 7; no. Suppl 1; pp. S22 - S26
Main Authors Singhal, Manish, Prabhash, Kumar, Babu, K. Govind, Chaturvedi, Pankaj, Kuriakose, Moni, Birur, Praveen, Anand, Anil K., Kaushal, Ashish, Mahajan, Abhishek, Syiemlieh, Judita, Gairola, Munish, Ramachandra, Prakash, Goyal, Sumit, John, Subashini, Nayyar, Rohit, Patil, Vijay M., Rao, Vishal, Noronha, Vanita, Roshan, Vikas, Rath, G. K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published India Wolters Kluwer - Medknow 01.01.2024
Edition2
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ISSN2590-3233
2590-3225
DOI10.4103/crst.crst_122_23

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Summary:In laryngeal cancer, the goal of treatment is to achieve maximum cure and preserve function of the larynx with good voice quality. In early disease, transoral laser microsurgery is the preferred choice of treatment. An option for treatment of carcinoma in situ is radiotherapy (RT). In locally advanced laryngeal carcinoma, concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CTRT) is an option. Induction therapy with docetaxel, cisplatin, and 5-flourouracil (TPF), followed by definitive RT or definitive CTRT can be one of the organ preservation approaches for patients undergoing total laryngectomy. For resectable locally advanced disease (T3, N0-3), surgery (laryngectomy with thyroidectomy, ipsilateral or bilateral neck dissection, and pretracheal and ipsilateral paratracheal lymph node dissection) with RT or CTRT should be considered.
ISSN:2590-3233
2590-3225
DOI:10.4103/crst.crst_122_23