Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Joaquin, Daryll
Case
LR, a 64 year-old female who presented with a
non-healing ulcer on the tongue.
History of Present Illness
3 months prior
Ulcer on the left lateral aspect of the anterior tongue.
Persistent tongue pain 7/10
Difficulty eating
No bleeding, and dysarthria
2 months prior
Ulcer persisted, as well as pain and dysphagia
With dysarthria
White tongue mass with bleeding after contact
Consult at a local hospital (ENT)
Biopsy was done, with an impression of SCCA.
Advised surgery
Consulted to our institution
Past History
Adult medical illnesses
(+) PTB, treated
No history of asthma, heart disease, kidney disorders,
diabetes, hypertension.
No previous operations, accidents, and injuries.
Family history
Mother breast cancer
Non-smoker, non-alcoholic beverage drinker, no
history betel nut or paan chewing
PE
Conscious, coherent, ambulatory
In persistent pain (5/10)
Stable vital signs RR 18, HR 80, BP 110/70, T 36.7
No active dermatoses
Normocephalic, atraumatic head
Normal conjunctiva, anicteric sclera, PERRLA
Normoset ears, nontender, intact TM both, no hearing
loss
Septum midline, patent nostrils, no discharge or
bleeding
PE
3x2cm hard mass on the left anterior tongue, crossing
midline. With white ulceration measuring 1cm at the
left anterior tongue. No active bleeding.
Neck supple, trachea midline, no palpable cervical
lymphadenopathies
Symmetric chest expansion, clear and equal breath
sounds
Adynamic precordium, good cardiac tones, no murmur
Soft, globular, nondistended, nontender abdomen,
normoactive bowel sounds.
Full pulses.
CT scan
isodense ovoid soft tissue mass
on the tongue with irregular
enhancement in the L crossing
towards R
3.8 x 2.8 x 3.0 cm
No plane of cleavage with the left
mylohyoid, left hyoglossus and
both genioglossus muscles.
Hypodense nodules in both
thyroid lobes
Calcification in the left tonsil
Parotid and submandibular
glands are not enlarged and
normal in attenuation
No evidence of enlarged lymph
nodes.
Endoscopy
showed no nasopharynx, oropharynx, or
laryngeal mass.
Final Procedure
Near Total Glossectomy; Bilateral Neck
Dissection; Supraomohyoid; Reconstruction
using Left Supraclavicular Island Pedicle Flap.
Patient tolerated the procedure.
The rest of the hospital stay was
unremarkable.
Discharged after 7 days of hospital stay.
Differentials
Recurrent Aphthous Ulcer
Recurrent Intraoral Herpes
Simplex Ulcer
Traumatic Ulcer
Leukoplakia
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Diagnosis
Tongue Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Epidemiology
Oral cancer accounts for less than 3% of all
cancers in the US
11th most common cancer worldwide
Approximately 90% of all oral malignancies are
squamous cell carcinoma.
The tongue is the most common site of all
intraoral malignancies.
Etiology
Tobacco and alcohol abuse are the strongest
predictors of developing oropharyngeal
carcinoma
HPV infection is strongly implicated in people
not exposed to smoking or alcohol
mainly tonsillar carcinoma and, to a lesser extent,
base of tongue carcinoma
Familial associations
Actinic radiations
Betel nut and paan chewing
Poor diet
Pathophysiology
P16 inactivation loss of inhibitor of cdk and
progression to hyperplasia & hyperkeratosis
P53 mutations progression of dysplasia
Gross genomic alterations progression to
malignancy
Cyclin D1 overexpression active cell cycle
progression
Natural History
Persistent nonhealing ulcer with/without
associated pain
Difficulty with deglutition and speech
History of leukoplakia
Rate of growth
Lesion thickness
Cervical metastases
Gross
Early lesions appear as
pearly white to gray
circumscribed thickenings
of the mucosa.
They may grow in an
exophytic fashion to
produce a palpable
nodular fungating lesions
Or they may assume an
endophytic invasive
pattern with central
necrosis creating a
cancerous ulcer.
Histology
Squamous cell carcinoma arises from
dysplastic surface epithelium and is
characterized histopathologically by invasive
islands and cords of malignant squamous
epithelial cells.
The lesional epithelium is capable of inducing
the formation of new small blood vessels
(angiogenesis) and, occasionally, dense
fibrosis (desmoplasia or scirrhous change).
Hyperchromatic
Histology
Well-differentiated squamous
cell carcinoma.
A, Low-power
photomicrograph showing
islands of malignant
squamous epithelium
invading into the lamina
propria.
B, High-power view showing
dysplastic epithelial cells with
keratin pearl formation.
Histology
Moderately differentiated squamous Poorly differentiated squamous cell
cell carcinoma. Although no carcinoma. The numerous
keratinization is seen in this medium- pleomorphic cells within the lamina
power view, these malignant cells are propria represent anaplastic
still easily recognizable as being of carcinoma.
squamous epithelial origin.
Metastasis
The metastatic spread of
oral squamous cell
carcinoma is largely through
the lymphatics
The most common sites of
distant metastasis are the
lungs, liver, and bones
Metastasis is not an early
event for carcinomas of the
oral cavity.
However, because of delay
in the diagnosis,
approximately 21% of
patients have cervical
metastases at diagnosis
Diagnostic Investigations
biopsy of lesion
Assesses tumor histology
atypical keratinocytes with
pleomorphism
hyperchromatic nuclei
mitosis invading the
basement membrane
PET-CT of the head and
neck
tumor size, extension,
presence or absence of
involved neck nodes,
distant metastases, and
second primary
Diagnostic Investigations
CT scan
establish the location, size, and extent of the
tumor
MRI
tumor size, extension, presence and absence of
neck nodes, nerve infiltration, and bone marrow
infiltration
Endoscopy
detects second primary or tumor not visible on
imaging for blind biopsy
Neck node biopsy
Tumor grading
Glossectomy
performed mainly for cancers of the tongue
Partial glossectomy
Total glossectomy
severe dysfunction with swallowing and resultant
aspiration
performed along with a total laryngectomy in
order to prevent aspiration and pneumonia
A neck dissection is also often indicated for
tongue cancers
Glossectomy
Complications
Infection
Bleeding
Dysarthria
Dysphagia
Aspiration
Salivary fistula
Treatment
stage I or II (early stage disease)
1. Surgery
fatal complications of 3.2% to 3.5%
non-fatal severe complications 23% to 32%
2. Radiotherapy
fatal complications 0.2% to 0.4%
Non-fatal severe complications 3.8% to 6%
Treatment
stage III and IVA (Locally advanced stages Resectable)
chemotherapy cetuximab
Should be treated with chemotherapy.
Conventional chemotherapy is usually a platinum
agent with fluorouracil.
Cisplatin or carboplatin AND fluorouracil and
cetuximab
Treatment
Recurrent Disease
For recurrent disease after previous local
therapy without any evidence of distant
metastases, salvage with surgery,
radiotherapy, or chemoradiotherapy may be
considered on an individual basis
Emerging Treatments
Anti-epidermal growth factor and anti-angiogenesis
agents
anti-epidermal growth factor receptor agents such as
erlotinib
anti-angiogenesis agents such as bevacizumab
anti-epidermal growth factor receptor monoclonal
antibody, panitumumab
Biomarkers
presence of oncoprotein E6 may confer a survival
advantage for HPV-16-induced oropharyngeal cancer
Increased expression of epidermal growth factor receptor
(EGFR) in the tumor specimen may confer a poor prognosis
Tomotherapy-based image-guided radiotherapy
Complications
oral mucositis
speech alteration after surgery
dysphagia and aspiration after surgery or
radiotherapy
xerostomia after radiotherapy
hearing loss after chemotherapy and
radiotherapy
hypothyroidism after neck radiotherapy
Follow-up
FBC, chemical profile, albumin, and pre-
albumin
modified barium swallow or endoscopic
examination
PET-CT
Thyroid function tests
Prognosis
Overall survival is approximately 50%.
Rates of survival at 5 years by stage are the
following:
stage I, 80%
stage II, 60%
stages III and IV, 15% to 35%.
The presence of lymph node metastases
decreases the survival rate by 50%.
Gross