Diagnostics (Oct 2024)

Rare Head and Neck Cancers and Pathological Diagnosis Challenges: A Comprehensive Literature Review

  • Daria Maria Filippini,
  • Francesca Carosi,
  • Giulia Querzoli,
  • Matteo Fermi,
  • Ilaria Ricciotti,
  • Gabriele Molteni,
  • Livio Presutti,
  • Maria Pia Foschini,
  • Laura Deborah Locati

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14212365
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 21
p. 2365

Abstract

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Head and neck cancers (HNCs) arise from anatomically adjacent sites and subsites, with varying etiological factors, diagnostic strategies, prognoses, and treatment approaches. While conventional squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the most common histology in the head and neck district, HNCs encompass a variety of rare histopathological entities, categorized into epithelial tumors such as salivary gland cancers, sinonasal tumors, neuroendocrine tumors, malignant odontogenic tumors, and SCC variants versus non-epithelial tumors including soft tissue sarcomas, mucosal melanomas, and hematological malignancies. Rare HNCs (R-HNCs) represent a diagnostic and clinical challenge, requiring histopathological expertise, the availability of peculiar molecular analysis, and the personalization of local and systemic treatments, all guided by a multidisciplinary tumor board. Here, we provide a comprehensive literature review on R-HNCs, emphasizing key histopathological and molecular characteristics that are crucial for guiding treatment decisions. An insight about the latest developments in systemic treatments is also reported.

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