Did you know that each year, amost 13,000 people in the UK will be given the news that they have head and neck cancer? Unfortunately, these numbers continue to rise. To mark World Head and Neck Cancer Day, we hear from Grainne Brady, PhD Student at Imperial’s Department of Surgery and Cancer, NIHR Clinical Doctoral Research Fellow and Speech Language Therapist at the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust London. She shares her expertise on the link between head and neck cancer and changes to swallowing, communication and the potential impact on quality of life.
Treatments for HNC include surgery, radiation and chemotherapy(1). Traditional risk factors for HNC include a history of tobacco and alcohol use (2). More recently, human papilloma virus (HPV) has been recognised as a risk factor for the development of oropharyngeal cancer which is a subtype of cancer affecting the back of the throat, tonsils, back of the tongue and soft palate (2). The discovery that a virus can cause this condition has led to the development of a UK-wide HPV vaccination programme available for both boys and girls aged 12-13 years (3).
There have been huge advances in the treatment of HNC over the past two to – three decades. These include advanced radiation techniques like intensity-modulated radiation therapy and minimally invasive surgeries such as transoral robotic surgery, which are now standard of care techniques (4).