口腔癌症的成像进展和有需要人群的观点:英国-印度口腔癌症成像小组的共识

Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.4103/jhnps.jhnps_10_21
N. Subramaniam, Harish Poptani, A. Schache, Venkataramana Bhat, S. Iyer, H. Sunil, N. Chandrasekhar, V. Pillai, P. Chaturvedi, S. Krishna, A. Krishnamurthy, V. Kekatpure, M. Kuriakose, N. Iyer, A. Thakkar, R. Kantharia, A. Sonkar, V. Shetty, V. Rangappa, T. Kolur, S. Vidhyadharan, Samskruthi P. Murthy, A. Kudpaje, V. Srinivasalu, A. Mahajan
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引用次数: 1

摘要

口腔鳞状细胞癌(OSCC)占印度癌症负担的三分之一,癌症特异性死亡率相应较高。尽管印度的OSCC治疗反映了高收入国家的情况,但在资源有限的环境中,疾病的极端负担、晚期表现和相关的疾病晚期构成了独特的挑战。尽管采用了多模式治疗模式,但存活率很低。延迟就诊的原因通常是诊断延迟、调查和转诊不当、治疗受损或不正确,导致患者预后不佳,并给医疗保健提供者带来成本。为了解决这些问题,2019年4月在印度班加罗尔举办了首届英国-印度口腔癌症成像进展研讨会;参与者包括来自英国、印度、新加坡和美国的放射科医生、成像科学家、临床医生和数据科学家。在这次会议期间进行的讨论之后,在这份手稿中,我们提出了成像在OSCC中作用的循证指南、服务开发建议,以及头颈部成像未来发展潜力的细节。
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Imaging advances in oral cavity cancer and perspectives from a population in need: Consensus from the UK-India oral cancer imaging group
Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) accounts for a third of the cancer burden in India, with a correspondingly high cancer-specific mortality. Although treatment of OSCC in India mirrors that of high-income nations, extreme burden of disease, late presentation, and the associated advanced stage of disease pose unique challenges in a resource-constrained environment. Despite a multimodal treatment paradigm, survival rates are low. Often the cause for late presentation is the delayed diagnosis, inappropriate investigation and referral, and compromised or incorrect treatment, leading to poor patient outcomes and costs to the health-care provider. To address these issues, the first UK-India Symposium on Advances in Oral Cancer Imaging Symposium was organized in Bangalore, India, in April 2019; participants included radiologists, imaging scientists, clinicians, and data scientists from the United Kingdom, India, Singapore, and the United States. Following the discussions held during this meeting, in this manuscript, we present evidence-based guidance for the role of imaging in OSCC, recommendations for service development, and details of future potential for evolution in head and neck imaging.
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