Treatment Plan

After determining a diagnosis of hard palate cancer and completing a full pre-treatment evaluation, doctors will recommend a course of treatment for their patients. This treatment plan will depend on whether or not the cancer has spread to other regions. In general, there are three different options for the treatment of hard palate cancers that can be used alone or in combination.

Surgery 

For hard palate cancer, complete surgical removal of the tumor is almost always the first treatment, unless a doctor decides that it is not possible or safe to proceed with surgery. Hard palate cancers may be treated with a soft tissue resection, a maxillectomy, or a neck dissection.

The surgery that a doctor recommends will depend on the location and extent of the cancer, as well as the stage. The management of the maxilla and hard palate bones, as well as the lymph nodes and other structures in the neck, are important factors to consider when planning a surgery for hard palate cancer. 

Restoration of function to this region is vitally important, since most cancer operations involving this region lead to an opening in the palate and a loss of some of the upper teeth. Various forms of restoration of these types of defects have been employed and may include the use of a prosthesis, known as a palatal obturator, or any of a variety of reconstructive techniques. Patients and their care teams should discuss the types of surgeries that may be required for the treatment of their cancer. 

Radiation 

The most common use of radiation for the treatment of hard palate cancer is called adjuvant radiation, which is radiation given after surgery in order to decrease the chances that the tumor will come back. 

A doctor may recommend this type of post-surgical radiation for the following reasons, among others: 

  • If the tumor was not completely removed or if the surgical margins were positive for cancer.
  • If the type of cancer was determined to be aggressive or of a high grade or T-stage.
  • If the cancer had spread to lymph nodes or other structures, such as nerves or vessels.

In some cases, complete surgical removal of a hard palate cancer may be impossible or unsafe, and a doctor may recommend radiation therapy as the primary treatment. In this type of treatment, an external beam of radiation is directed at the tumor in order to destroy the rapidly dividing cancer cells.

Chemotherapy 

Chemotherapy is not commonly used to treat hard palate cancer.  In some cases, it is used in combination with radiation as additional treatment following surgery. Chemotherapy is usually only added to adjuvant radiation therapy if there is extranodal extension from cancerous lymph nodes in the neck, or if there is cancer left behind during surgery. 

General Treatment Options for Hard Palate Cancer

These options depend on T and N stages.

T1-2, N0 
  • The preferred treatment is surgical removal of the cancer, with or without a neck dissection, depending on the location of the tumor and on how thick the tumor is.
    • A sentinel lymph node biopsy may also be performed, and may be followed by a neck dissection, depending on the results of the biopsy.
  • Surgery will sometimes be followed by radiation, additional surgeries, and/or chemotherapy with radiation, depending on the outcome of the primary surgery.
  • Radiation alone is also a primary treatment option.
    • Radiation could be followed by surgery, depending on whether any disease remained after the initial radiation.
T3, N0; T1-3, N1-3; or T4a, any N
  • The initial treatment is surgical removal of the cancer with neck dissection(s).
  • Surgery will sometimes be followed by radiation, additional surgeries, and/or chemotherapy with radiation, depending on the outcome of the primary surgery.
  • Factors that will guide additional treatment include: 
    • Positive margins (the presence of cancer cells at the edge of the tissue that was resected).
    • Spread of cancer beyond the lymph nodes in the neck (extranodal extension).
    • T3 or T4 tumors based on pathologic evaluation.
    • N2 or N3 disease in the neck lymph nodes.
    • Cancerous lymph nodes in unusual parts of the neck.
    • Tumor invasion into or around nerves (perineural invasion).
    • Tumor invasion into blood vessels (lymphovascular invasion).
T4b, any N; unresectable neck disease
  • In cases that are very advanced, or in patients who are extremely sick, doctors should undergo an extensive discussion with their patients.
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