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Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Unknown Primary Head and Neck

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4 Surgical Considerations ➤ 3.1: For unilateral, small-volume neck disease, either definitive surgery or radiation therapy may be offered after multidisciplinary discussion. (Moderate recommendation; EB-B-I) ➤ 3.2: For small-volume bilateral neck disease with no clinical evidence of extranodal extension, either definitive surgery (with or without adjuvant therapy) or radiation therapy (with or without concurrent chemotherapy) may be offered after multidisciplinary discussion. (Moderate recommendation; EB-B-I) ➤ 3.3: Large-volume bilateral neck disease, and/or gross (macroscopic) extranodal extension (ENE) favor definitive chemoradiation therapy given the possible increased morbidity of extensive bilateral neck dissection and increased likelihood of trimodality therapy in such cases. (Moderate recommendation; EB-B-I) ➤ 3.4: When primary surgery is planned, Levels IIA, III and IV should be routinely dissected in cases where an oropharyngeal primary is suspected or confirmed for SCCUP. Additional nodal basins should be considered for dissection depending on the extent of nodal burden. (Strong recommendation; EB-B-I) Radiotherapy ➤ 4.1: Patients receiving radiotherapy or concurrent chemoradiotherapy as primary management of CUP should receive treatment to gross nodal disease, neck regions at-risk of containing microscopic disease and the anatomic mucosal regions at-risk of harboring the occult primary. Specific volumes treated will depend on the clinicopathologic presentation of the patient after complete work-up as outlined in recommendations 1 and 2. (Strong recommendation; EB-B-I) ➤ 4.2: Patients treated with primary radiotherapy for unilateral (American Joint Committee on Cancer [AJCC] 8th N1) HPV-related adenopathy and CUP should receive treatment to the gross node(s) and with consideration of coverage of putative primary sites in the ipsilateral tonsillar bed, ipsilateral soft palate, and the mucosa of the entire base of tongue, which may be modified based on prior surgical diagnostics (see Recommendation 2.2) at the discretion of the radiation oncologist. (Moderate recommendation; EB-B-I) Note: Consideration may be given to including additional areas in the oropharynx in patients for whom a PET scan was not available or who did not undergo a contralateral tonsillectomy because of the low risk of an occult contralateral tonsillar primary. Patients presenting with bilateral (AJCC 8th N2) adenopathy and CUP require bilateral treatment of the oropharyngeal mucosa.

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