In this issue, G. J. Slotman and his colleagues review 1,066 patients with cancer of the head and neck (Head and Neck Cancer in a Young Age Group: High Incidence in Black Patients). They identify a significantly increased proportion of young black patients in the total group of black head and neck c
Head and neck cancer in a young age group: High incidence in black patients
โ Scribed by Slotman, Gus J. ;Swaminathan, A. P. ;Rush, Benjamin F.
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1983
- Weight
- 514 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-6403
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From the Tumor Registries of the East Orange, New Jersey, Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the College of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey/New Jersey Medical School, 1,066 cases of head and neck cancer were reviewed. Blacks comprised 32% of the population reviewed. Charts of 70 patients, 45 years old or younger, were examined. Seventy percent of this group was black. At diagnosis, the proportion of patients 45 years old or younger was 14% for blacks and 2.9% for whites, a significant difference (P < 0.001). Seventy-six percent of lesions in black patients and 86% in white patients were situated above the hypopharynx. Sixty-one percent of all patients 45 years old or younger had Stage Ill or IV lesions when first diagnosed, regardless of race. Black-to-white survival rates were 23 to 40% after 2 years, and 5 to 13% for those at risk after 5 years. Prognosis is poor for younger patients, in general, and worse for young black patients than for whites.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Background: Elderly patients over 80 years of age represent a growing population, some of whom have complex medical problems that are compounded by the presence of upper aerodigestive tract cancer. ## Methods: Forty-three patients, aged 80 years and older, who were initially seen with head and
## Background: The importance of hypoxia in limiting the sensitivity of tumor cells to ionizing radiation has long been known. ## Methods: We evaluated the tissue oxygenation status with a polarographic needle electrode system in 37 patients with malignancies of the head and neck and correlated t
## Abstract The immune reactivity of 100 head and neck cancer patients was studied by means of DNCB, candidine, blastic transformation with PHA, and lymphocyte counts. DNCB reactivity was strong in only 21% of the population and was found impaired in patients with advanced primitive tumors, with m
Background. After radiotherapy to the head and neck, many patients experience swallowing difficulties. Preliminary work indicates that these patients benefit from the supersupraglottic swallow maneuver. Methods. Lateral videofluoroscopic studies examined oropharyngeal swallowing in 9 patients who s