Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
Abstracts - RGCON 2016
Case Report
Commentary
Editorial
Erratum
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Original Article
Point of Technique
Review Article
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
Abstracts - RGCON 2016
Case Report
Commentary
Editorial
Erratum
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Original Article
Point of Technique
Review Article
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
Abstracts - RGCON 2016
Case Report
Commentary
Editorial
Erratum
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Original Article
Point of Technique
Review Article
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Editorial
01 (
01
); 001-001
doi:
10.4103/2454-6798.165082

Head and neck oncology: Where are we heading?

Department of Surgical Oncology, Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Institute, New Delhi, India
Address for correspondence: Dr. AK Dewan, Medical Director and Chief Head and Neck Oncology Services, Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Institute, New Delhi, India. dewan.ajay@gmail.com
Licence
Disclaimer:
This article was originally published by Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Private Ltd. and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.

Head and neck oncology is an evolving specialty demanding expertise in various disciplines and exposure to many specialties. In the past, the surgeon was in charge of Head and neck cancer patient's care from diagnosis till death. Now the surgeon is part of the multidisciplinary team that makes treatment decisions. We have moved headway to develop guidelines for various head and neck cancers on evidence-based medicine. Our aim was to bring about the change from the individualized approach to algorithm specified therapy. The convergence of opinion through evidence-based medicine is the accepted course of action. What matters is our loyalty to our patients and not our hope of curing all cancers.

For the last two decades, the management of head and neck cancers has been characterized by profound changes, both triggered by the willingness of oncologists to reshape significantly their conceptual approaches to locally advanced diseases and facilitated by the advent of newer technologies. Indeed, the potentialities of functional imaging, the significant progress in conservative surgery and reconstruction, the acknowledged role of concurrent chemo-radiation and the advent of targeted therapies are among the main tracks along which fundamental changes in the philosophy of management have been recently observed. Coincident with this is the need to move progressively to a much more holistic approach, taking greater account of the quality of life after treatment.

The first issue of this journal is aimed at showing how considerable are today's efforts toward improving treatment outcomes for head and neck cancer patients. This willingness to make significant and rapid progress probably derives from the fact that rarely in oncology are treatment failures more readily visible and functionally impairing than in these patients. This together with the fact that head and neck cancer is a “big killer” worldwide and Asia, in particular, fully justifies the intensive translational and clinical research that fosters and optimizes our ways to plan and deliver treatments.

This journal is also designed and written with the intent of providing oncologists with a broad, comprehensive, and balanced view of both consolidated and innovative concepts. Its objective is to help practitioners understand better the mechanisms that drive the development of cancer, as well as revisit, the evidence-based data and complexities of decision-making in this field.


Fulltext Views
241

PDF downloads
108
View/Download PDF
Download Citations
BibTeX
RIS
Show Sections